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Prehistory and History of Anatolia-Turkey-Türkiye:
Every Year
Anatolia (Anadolu)
Anatolia (Turkish: Anadolu),
also known by the Latin name of Asia Minor, is considered to be the
westernmost extent of Western Asia.
Anatolia (Turkey) is that region lying to the south of the
Black Sea, to the east of the Aegean Sea, north of the eastern Mediterranean Sea
and, inland, the Fertile Crescent, and west of the Caucasus-Azerbaijani
districts. A very roughly hewn upland region for the most part, it has been both
a home and a highway for a bewildering variety of peoples for as long as there
have been humans.
Anatolia stretches from the
Paleolithic (Old Stone Age) era through to the appearance of classical civilisation
in the middle of the 1st millennium BC. It is generally regarded as
being divided into three ages reflecting the dominant materials used
for the making of domestic implements and weapons:
- Stone Age,
- Copper Age (c. 5500–3000 BC),
- Bronze
Age (3000–1200 BC) and
- Iron Age (c. 1300–600 BC).
The term Copper Age (Chalcolithic) is used to
denote the period straddling the stone and Bronze Ages.
The earliest representations of culture in Anatolia can be found in
several archaeological sites located in the central, southern, and eastern part
of the region. Stone Age artifacts such as animal bones and food
fossils were found at Burdur (north of Antalya). Although the
origins of some of the earliest peoples are shrouded in mystery, the
remnants of Bronze Age civilizations, such as the Troy, Hattians,
the Akkadian Empire, Assyria, and the Hittites, provide us with many
examples of the daily lives of its citizens and their trade. After
the fall of the Hittites, the new states of Phrygia and Lydia stood
strong on the western coast together with Lykia and Caria. Only the
threat from a distant Persian kingdom prevented them from advancing
past their peak of success.
Anatolia (Anadolu)
Stone Age
Old Stone
Age (Paleolithic Age) (2.6 million years BC - 10000 BC)
Mid Stone
Age (Mesolithic)
New Stone
Age (Neolithic (around 10000BC-4500BC))
Copper Age (Chalcolithic Age) (c. 5500–3000 BC)
Bronze Age (3000–1200 BC)
Early Bronze Age (3000–2500 BC)
Middle Bronze Age (2500–2000 BC)
Late Bronze Age (2000–1200 BC)
Hattians
Hittites
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Old
Kingdom of Hittites
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Middle
Kingdom of Hittites
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New
Kingdom of Hittites
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Syro-Hittite era of Hittites
Mycenaean presence
Iron Age (c. 1300–600 BC)
Western Anatolia
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Troad
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Aeolis
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Ionia
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Lydia
(Maeonia)
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Caria
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Lycia
Central Anatolia
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Phrygia
Eastern
Anatolia
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Cimmeria
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Urartu
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Assyria
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Stone Age
The Stone Age is a prehistoric
period in which stone was widely used in the manufacture of
implements. This period occurred after the appearance of the genus
Homo about 2.6 million years ago and roughly lasted 2.5 million
years to the period between 4500 and 2000 BC with the appearance of
metalworking. i
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Old Stone Age (Paleolithic
Age) (paleo=old, lith=stone) (2.6 million years BC - 10000 BC)
- Yarimburgaz Cave
(Istanbul),
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Karain Cave (Antalya),
- Okuzini,
- Beldibi
- Belbasi,
- Kumbucagi and
- Kadiini caves in adjacent
areas.
Examples of paleolithic humans
can be found in the
Museum of Anatolian Civilizations (Ankara),
in the Archaeological Museum in Antalya, and in other Turkish
institutions. i
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Mid Stone Age (Mesolithic)
Remains of a mesolithic culture
in Anatolia can be found along the Mediterranean coast and also
in Thrace and the western Black Sea area. Mesolithic remains
have been located in the same caves as the paleolithic artefacts
and drawings. Additional findings come from the Sarklimagara
cave in Gaziantep, the Baradiz cave (Burdur), as well as the
cemeteries and open air settlements at Sogut Tarlasi, Biris (Bozova)
and Urfa. i
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New Stone Age (Neolithic
(around 10000BC-4500BC))
Because of its strategic
location at the intersection of Asia and Europe, Anatolia has
been the center of several civilizations since prehistoric
times. It is claimed that that the dispersal of
Proto-Indo-Europeans originated in Neolithic
Anatolia. It is the
main competitor to the Kurgan hypothesis, or steppe theory, the
more favoured view academically. Neolithic settlements include
Çatalhöyük, Çayönü, Nevali Cori,
Aşıklı Höyük, Boncuklu Höyük
Hacilar,
Karahan
Tepe,
Göbekli Tepe, Norşuntepe, Kosk, and Mersin.
Çatalhöyük (Central Turkey) is considered the most advanced of
these, and Çayönü in the east the oldest (c. 7250–6750 BC). We
have a good idea of the town layout at Çayönü, based on a
central square with buildings constructed of stone and mud.
Archeological finds include farming tools that suggest both
crops and animal husbandry as well as domestication of the dog.
Religion is represented by figurines of Cybele, the mother
goddess. Hacilar (Western Turkey) followed Çayönü, and has been
dated to 7040 BC. i
Copper Age (Chalcolithic Age) (c. 5500–3000
BC)
Straddling the Neolithic and early Bronze Age, the Chalcolithic era
(c. 5500–3000 BC) is defined by the first metal implements made with
copper. This age is represented in Anatolia by sites at Hacilar,
Beycesultan, Canhasan, Mersin Yumuktepe, Elazig Tepecik, Malatya
Degirmentepe, Norşuntepe, and Istanbul Fikirtepe.
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Bronze Age (3000–1200 BC)
The Bronze Age (c. 3300–1200 BC) is
characterised by the use of copper and its tin alloy, bronze, for
manufacturing implements. Asia Minor was one of the first areas to
develop bronze making. i
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Early Bronze Age (3000–2500 BC)
Although the first habitation
appears to have occurred as early as the 6th millennium BC
during the Chalcolithic period, functioning settlements trading
with each other occurred during the 3rd millennium BC. A
settlement on a high ridge would become known as Büyükkaya, and
later as the city of Hattush, the center of this civilization.
Later still it would become the Hittite stronghold of Hattusha
and is now Boğazköy. Remnants of the Hattian civilization have
been found both under the lower city of Hattusha and in the
higher areas of Büyükkaya and Büyükkale, Another settlement was
established at Yarikkaya, about 2 km to the northeast.
The discovery of mineral deposits in this part of Anatolia
allowed Anatolians to develop metallurgy, producing items such
as the implements found in the royal graves at Alaca Höyük,
about 25 km from Boğazköy, which it preceded, dating from
2400–2200 BC. Other Hattian centers include Hassum, Kanesh,
Purushanda, and Zalwar. During this time the Hattians engaged in
trade with city-states such as those of Sumer, which needed
timber products from the Amanus mountains.
Anatolia had remained in the prehistoric period until it entered
the sphere of influence of the Akkadian Empire in the 24th
century BC under Sargon of Akkad, particularly in eastern
Anatolia. However, the Akkadian Empire suffered problematic
climate changes in Mesopotamia, as well as a reduction in
available manpower that affected trade. This led to its fall
around 2150 BC at the hands of the Gutians. The interest of
the Akkadians in the region as far as it is known was for
exporting various materials for manufacturing. Bronze metallurgy
had spread to Anatolia from the Transcaucasian Kura-Araxes
culture in the late 4th millennium BC. While Anatolia was
well endowed with copper ores, there was no evidence of
substantial workings of the tin required to make bronze in
Bronze-Age Anatolia. i
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Middle Bronze Age (2500–2000 BC)
At the origins of written
history, the Anatolian plains inside the area ringed by the
Kızılırmak River were occupied by the first defined civilization
in Anatolia, a non-Indo-European indigenous people named the
Hattians (c. 2500 BC – c. 2000 BC). During the middle Bronze
Age, the Hattian civilization, including its capital of Hattush,
continued to expand. The Anatolian middle Bronze Age influenced
the early Minoan culture of Crete (3400 to 2200 BC) as evidenced
by archaeological findings at Knossos. i
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Late Bronze Age (2000–1200 BC)
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The
Hattians came into contact
with Assyrians traders from Assur
in Mesopotamia such as at Kanesh (Nesha) near modern Kültepe who provided them with the
tin needed to make bronze. These trading posts or Karums (Akkadian
for Port), have lent their name to a period, the Karum Period.
The Karums, or Assyrian trading colonies, persisted in Anatolia
until Hammurabi conquered Assyria and it fell under Babylonian
domination in 1756 BC. These Karums represented separate
residential areas where the traders lived, protected by the
Hattites, and paying taxes in return. Meanwhile, the
fortifications of Hattush were strengthened with construction of
royal residences on Büyükkale.
After the Assyrians overthrew their Gutian neighbours (c. 2050
BC) they claimed the local resources, notably silver, for
themselves. However the Assyrians brought writing to Anatolia, a
necessary tool for trading and business. These transactions were
recorded in Akkadian cuneiform on clay tablets. Records found at
Kanesh use an advanced system of trading computations and credit
lines. The records also indicate the names of the cities where
the transaction occurred. i
The history of the
Hittite
civilization is known mostly from cuneiform texts found in the
area of their empire, and from diplomatic and commercial
correspondence found in various archives in Egypt and the Middle
East. i
Hattian civilization was also
impacted by an invading Indo-European people, the Hittites, in
the early 18th century BC, Hattush being burned to the ground in
1700 BC by King Anitta of Kussar after overthrowing King
Piyushti. He then placed a curse on the site and set up his
capital at Kanesh 160 km south east. The Hittites absorbed the
Hattians over the next century, a process that was essentially
complete by 1650 BC. Eventually Hattusha became a Hittite centre
by the second half of the 17th century BC, and King Hattusili I
(1586–1556 BC) moved his capital back to Hattusha from Neša (Kanesh).
The Old Hittite Empire (17th–15th centuries BC) was at its
height in the 16th century BC, encompassing central Anatolia,
north-western Syria as far as Ugarit, and upper Mesopotamia.
Kizzuwatna in southern Anatolia controlled the region separating
the Hittite Empire from Syria, thereby greatly affecting trade
routes. The peace was kept in accordance with both empires
through treaties that established boundaries of control.
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Middle Kingdom of Hittites
Following the reign of Telipinu
(c. 1460 BC) the Hittite kingdom entered a relatively weak and
poorly documented phase, known as the Middle Kingdom, from the
reign of Telipinu's son-in-law, Alluwamna (mid-15th century BC)
to that of Muwatalli I (c. 1400 BC). i
King Tudhaliya I (early 14th
century BC) ushered in a new era of Hittite power, often
referred to as the Hittite Empire. The Kings took on a divine
role in Hittite society and the Hittite peoples, often allied
with neighbours such as the Kizzuwatna began to expand again,
moving into Western Anatolia, absorbing the Luwian state of
Arzawa and the Assuwa League.
It was not until the reign of King Suppiluliumas (c. 1344–1322
BC) that Kizzuwatna was taken over fully, although the Hittites
still preserved their cultural accomplishments in Kummanni (now
Şar, Turkey) and Lazawantiya, north of Cilicia.
In the 13th century, after the reign of Hattusili III (c.
1267–1237 BC), Hittite power began to wane, threatened by Egypt
to the South and Assyria to the East, effectively ending with
Suppiluliuma II (c. 1207–1178 BC). i
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Syro-Hittite era of Hittites
After 1180s BC, amid general
turmoil in the Levant associated with the sudden arrival of the
Sea Peoples, and the collapse of the Bronze Age the empire
disintegrated into several independent Syro-Hittite
(Neo-Hittite) city-states, some of which survived until as late
as the 8th century BC. In the West, Greeks were arriving on the
Anatolian coast, and the Kaskas along the northern Black Sea
coast. Eventually Hattusha itself was destroyed around 1200 BC
and the age of Empires shifted to that of regional states as the
Bronze Age transitioned into the Iron Age. i
There is very little
information about early Mycenaean presence in Anatolia. Miletus
was clearly a center of Mycenaean presence in Asia Minor in the
period c. 1450–1100 BC. The zone of intense Mycenaean settlement
extends as far as Bodrum/Halicarnassus.
The Mycenaean sphere of influence in Asia Minor is also
relatively restricted geographically: Intense Mycenaean
settlement is to be found in the archaeological records only for
the region between the Peninsula of Halicarnassus in the south
and Milet [Miletus] in the north (and in the islands off this
coastline, between Rhodes in the south and Kos – possibly also
Samos – in the north).
Attarsiya was a 15th–14th century BC military leader who was
probably Greek. He conducted the first recorded Mycenaean
military activity on the Anatolian mainland. His activities are
recorded in the Hittite archives of c. 1400 BC.
British archaeologist J.M. Cook studied the Greek historical
tradition about the Carians, and drew attention to the many
similarities between the Carians and the Mycenaeans.
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Iron Age (c. 1300–600 BC)
The Iron Age (c. 1300–600 BC) was
characterised by the widespread use of iron and steel. It is also an
age known for the development of alphabets and early literature. It
formed the last phase of Pre-history, spanning the period between
the collapse of the Bronze Age and the rise of classical
civilisation. In Anatolia the dissolution of the Hittite Empire was
replaced by regional Neo-Hittite powers, including Troad, Ionia,
Lydia, Caria and Lycia in the west, Phrygia, centrally and Cimmeria
and Urartu in the north east, while the Assyrians occupied much of
the south east. i
Western Anatolia
The
Troad, on the Biga
peninsula, was the northernmost of the Aegean settlements in
this period, best known for the legendary and historical city
state of Troy. There were probably settlements in this region
dating back to 3000 BC and the various archeological layers
representing successive civilisations are referred to as Troy I
(3000–2600 BC) to Troy IX (1st century BC). Iron Age Troy
corresponds to Troy VII-VIII, and coincides with the Homeric
account of Troy and the Trojan Wars. i
Aeolis was an area of the north
western Aegean coast, between
Troad and
Ionia, from the
Hellespont to the Hermus River (Gediz), west of Mysia and
Lydia. By the 8th century BC the twelve most important cities
formed a league. In the 6th
century the cities were progressively conquered by Lydia, and
then Persia. i
Ionia was part of a group of
settlements on the central Aegean
coast bounded by Lydia to the east, and Caria to the south,
known as the Ionian league. Ionians had been expelled from the
Peloponnesus by the Dorians,
and were resettled on the Aegean coastline of Anatolia by the
Athenians to whose land they had fled. By the time of the last
Lydian king, Croesus (560–545 BC) Ionia fell under Lydian, and
then Persian rule. With the defeat of Persia by the Greeks,
Ionia again became independent until absorbed into the Roman
province of Asia. i
Lydia, or Maeonia as it was
called before 687 BC, was a major part of the history of western
Anatolia, beginning with the Atyad dynasty, who first appeared
around 1300 BC. Lydia was situated to the west of Phrygia and
east of the Aegean settlement of Ionia. The Lydians were
Indo-European, speaking an Anatolian language related to Luwian
and Hittite.
The Heraclids, managed to rule successively from 1185–687 BC
despite a growing presence of Greek influences along the
Mediterranean coast. As Greek cities such as Smyrna, Colophon,
and Ephesus rose, the Heraclids became weaker and weaker. The
last king, Candaules, was murdered by his friend and
lance-bearer named Gyges, and he took over as ruler. Gyges waged
war against the intruding Greeks, and soon faced by a grave
problem as the Cimmerians began to pillage outlying cities
within the kingdom. It was this wave of attacks that led to the
incorporation of the formerly independent Phrygia and its
capital Gordium into the Lydian domain. It was not until the
successive rules of Sadyattes and Alyattes, ending in 560 BC,
that the attacks of the Cimmerians ended for good.
Under the reign of the last Lydian king Croesus, Lydia reached
its greatest expansion. Persia was invaded first at the Battle
of Pteria ending without a victor. Progressing deeper into
Persia, Croesus was thoroughly defeated in the Battle of Thymbra
at the hands of the Persian Cyrus II in 546 BC.
Following Croesus' defeat, Lydia fell under the hegemony of
Persia, Greece, Rome and Byzantium until finally being absorbed
into the Turkish lands. i
Caria forms a region in Western
Anatolia, south of Lydia, east of Ionia and north of Lycia.
Partially Greek (Ionian and Dorian), and possibly partially
Minoan. Caria became subject to Persia, Greece and Rome before
being absorbed into Byzantium. Remnants of the Carian
civilisation form a rich legacy in the south western Aegean.
Caria managed to maintain a relative degree of independence
during successive occupation, and its symbol, the double headed
axe is seen as a mark of defiance and can be seen inscribed on
many buildings. The mausoleum at Halicarnassus (modern Bodrum),
the tomb of the Persian Satrap Mausolus, was considered one of
the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Other important relics
include that of Mylasa (Milas) at one time capital of Caria and
administrative seat of Mausolus, Labranda in the mountains high
above Mylasa and Euromos (Herakleia) near Lake Bafa.
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Lycia formed the southernmost
settlement in Western Anatolia on what is now the Teke peninsula
on the western Mediterranean coast. There many historic Lycian
sites include Xanthos, Patara, Myra, Pinara, Tlos, Olympos and
Phaselis. Emerging at the end of the Bronze Age as a Neo-Hittite
league of city states whose governance model still influences
political systems today. Alternating between Persian and Greek
rule it eventually was incorporated into Rome, Byzantium and the
Turkish lands. i
Central Anatolia
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The west-central area of
Anatolia became the domain of the
Phrygian Kingdom
following the fragmentation of the Hittite Empire during the
12th century BC, existing independently until the 7th century
BC, and strongly featured in Greek mythology. Although their
origin is disputed, their language more resembled Greek (Dorian)
than the Hittites whom they succeeded. Possibly from the region
of Thrace, the Phrygians eventually established their capital at
Gordium (now Yassıhüyük) and an important religious center at
Yazılıkaya. Known as the Mushki to the Assyrians, the Phrygian
people lacked central control in their style of government, and
yet established an extensive network of roads. They also held
tightly onto a lot of the Hittite facets of culture and adapted
them over time.
Well known from ancient Greek and Roman writers is King Midas,
the last king of the Phrygian Kingdom. The mythology of Midas
revolves around his ability to turn objects to gold by mere
touch, as granted by Dionysos, and his unfortunate encounter
with Apollo from which his ears are turned into the ears of a
donkey. The historical record of Midas shows that he lived
approximately between 740 and 696 BC, and represented Phrygia as
a great king. Most historians now consider him to be King Mita
of the Mushki as noted in Assyrian accounts. The Assyrians
thought of Mita as a dangerous foe, for Sargon II, their ruler
at the time, was quite happy to negotiate a peace treaty in 709
BC. This treaty had no effect on the advancing Cimmerians in the
East, who streamed into Phrygia and led to the downfall and
suicide of King Midas in 696 BC.
After Midas's death, Phrygia lost its independence, becoming
respectively a vassal state of its western neighbour, Lydia,
Persia, Greece, Rome and Byzantium, disappearing in the Turkish
era. i
Eastern Anatolia i
Cimmeria was a region of north
eastern Anatolia, appearing
in the 8th century BC from
the north and east, in the face of the eastern Scythian advance.
They
continued to move west, invading and
subjugating Phrygia
(696–695 BC), penetrating as far south as Cilicia,
and west into Ionia after pillaging Lydia. Lydian campaigns
between 637 and 626 BC effectively halted this advance. The
Cimmerian influence progressively weakened and the last recorded
mention is in 515 BC. i
Urartu (Nairi, or the Kingdom
of Van) existed in north-east Anatolia, centered around Lake Van
(Nairi Sea), to the south of the Cimmerians and North of
Assyria. Its prominence ran from its appearance in the 9th
century until it was overrun by the Medes in the 6th century.
Urartu is first mentioned as a loose confederation of smaller
entities in the
Armenian Highlands in the 13th to 11th centuries BC, but was
subject to recurrent
Assyrian incursions before emerging as a powerful neighbour by
the 9th century BC. This was facilitated by Assyria's
weak position in the 8th century BC. Urartu continued to resist
Assyrian attacks and reached it greatest extent under Argishti I
(c. 785–760 BC). At that time it included present day Armenia,
southern Georgia reaching almost to the Black Sea, west to the
sources of the Euphrates and south to the sources of the Tigris.
Following this Urartu suffered a number of setbacks. King
Tiglath Pileser III of
Assyria conquered it in 745 BC. By 714 BC it was being ravaged
by both Cimmerian and Assyrian raids. After 645 BC Scythian attacks
provided further problems for Urartu forcing it to become
dependent on Assyria. However Assyria itself fell to a combined
attack of Scythians, Medes and Babylonians in 612 BC. While the
details of Urartu's demise are debated, it effectively
disappeared to be replaced by Armenia. It was a Persian Satrapy
for a while from the 6th century BC before becoming an
independent Armenia. To this day Urartu forms an important part
of Armenian nationalist sentiment. i
In the Iron Age
Assyria
extended to include south eastern Anatolia. Assyria, one of the
great powers of the Mesopotamia region, had a long history from
the 25th century BC (Bronze Age) until it final collapse in 612
BC at the end of the Iron Age. Assyria's Iron Age corresponds to
the Middle Period (resurgence) and the Neo-Assyrian Empire in
its last 300 years, and its territory centered on what is modern
day Iraq.
Assyria influenced Anatolian politics and culture from when its
traders first came into contact with Hattians in the late Bronze
Age. By the 13th century BC Assyria was expanding to its north
west at the expense of the Hittites, and to the north at the
expense of Urartu. Assyrian expansion reached its height under
Tukulti-Ninurta I (1244–1208 BC), following which it was
weakened by internal dissent. The collapse of the Hittie Empire
at the end of the Bronze Age coincided with an era of renewed
Assyrian expansion under Ashur-resh-ishi I (1133–1116 BC) and
soon Assyria had added the Anatolian lands in what is now Syria
to its empire. Tiglath-Pileser I (1115–1077 BC) then commenced
incursions against the Neo-Hittite Phrygians, followed by the
Luwian kingdoms of Commagene, Cilicia and Cappadocia.
With the death of Tiglath-Pileser I Assyria entered a period of
decline during what is referred to as the Ancient Dark Ages
(1075–912 BC) in the region that corresponded to the collapse of
the Bronze Age. The last 300 years of the Assyrian Empire
(Neo-Assyrian Empire) from 911–627 BC saw a renewed expansion
including attacks on the Neo-Hittite states to its north and
west. Ashurnasirpal II (883–859 BC) extracted tribute from
Phrygia while his successor Shalmaneser III (858–823 BC) also
attacked Urartu forcing his Anatolian neighbours to pay tribute.
After his death the land was torn by civil war. Assyrian power
continued to wax and wane with periodic incursions into the
Anatolian lands. Sennacherib (705–681 BC) encountered and drove
back a new force in the region, the Greeks who attempted to
settle Cilicia. His successor Esarhaddon (680–669 BC) was
responsible for the final destruction of Urartu. Ashurbanipal
(669-627 BC) then extended Assyrian influence still further
placing Caria, Cilicia, Lydia and Cappadocia into vassalage.
However Assyria found its resources stretched to maintain the
integrity of its vast empire and civil war again erupted
following the death of Ashurbanipal. Vassal states stopped
paying tribute, regaining independence. The weakened Assyrian
state was now faced by a new threat, a coalition of Iranian
peoples to its east and north, including Medes, Persians,
Scythians and the Anatolian Cimmerians, who attacked Assyria in
616 BC. Ninevah, the capital, fell in 612 BC and the Assyrian
Empire was finally swept away in 605 BC.
With the collapse of Assyria, ended not only the Iron Age, but
also the era referred to as Pre-History, to make way for what
has been variously described as Recorded History, or more
specifically late Ancient History or Classical Civilisation.
However these terms are not precise or universal and overlap.
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