Domuztepe (Aslantaş) is an archaeological site in Osmaniye Province in southern Turkey. It is located on the eastern bank of the Ceyhan River within the Karatepe-Aslantaş National Park. Across the river, there is the important Hittite site of Karatepe that was inhabited at the same time, starting in the ninth century BC.

Domuztepe orthostat - Tree of Life; 8th century BC. Karatepe-Aslantaş Open-Air Museum

This site is different from Domuztepe (Domuztepe Höyüğü (Kahramanmaraş)), the large mound of the Halaf period (fifth millennium BC) that is situated near Kahramanmaraş.[1] Kahramanmaras is also located on the Ceyhan river; it is about 70km upstream from Karatepe and Domuztepe.[2]

After the construction of Aslantaş Dam, Domuztepe (Aslantaş) was substantially flooded.

Unlike Karatepe, which was founded in the Iron Age period, Domuztepe (Aslantaş) has a long sequence of occupation beginning with the Neolithic period (8th Millennium BC). Domuztepe is located on a natural hill. It was partly excavated in the early 1980s, before the lower parts of the site became mostly submerged by the dam lake.[3]

A fortified city of the Hittite empire period also flourished there. At that time, there was a river crossing here on the caravan route between Syria and Anatolia.

Excavations

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In 1947, Th. Bossert and B. Alkım reported finding a statue base with two bulls at the site. It carries a poorly preserved hieroglyphic Luwian inscription. The find is currently at the Karatepe Museum.

In 1982, a Storm God stele was discovered at the site by Halet Çambel. Also several portal lions were found.[4][5]

Some villas of Roman period have also been discovered. In 1958, this currently forested area was designated as a Historic National Park.[6]

An 8th century BC "Tree of Life" orthostat was found here (illustration above). Two figures, probably gods, dance around a tree of life, under a winged sun disc. It is the only sample from Domuztepe which can be called an orthostat. From the viewpoint of design and workmanship the relief must have been carved by a sculptor from a workshop of Karatepe–Aslantaş.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Charles Burney 2004, Historical Dictionary of the Hittites. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810849364, 9780810849365
  2. ^ Location map showing Karatepe, Kahramanmaras, and other archaeological sites in the area, from Engin ÖZGEN, Barbara Helwing 2003, On the Shifting Border Between Mesopotamia and the West.
  3. ^ Karatepe-Aslantaş Archaeological Site. UNESCO World Heritage Centre - Tentative Lists
  4. ^ Çambel, H. Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions, Vol. 2: Karatepe-Aslantaş, Berlin. 1999: 1–11, 94–95 and plts. 122–25
  5. ^ Domuztepe hittitemonuments.com
  6. ^ Karatepe-Aslantaş Archaeological Site. UNESCO World Heritage Centre - Tentative Lists

Bibliography

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  • Çambel, H. Corpus of Hieroglyphic Luwian Inscriptions, Vol. 2: Karatepe-Aslantaş, Berlin. 1999: 1–11, 94–95 and plts. 122–25

External sites

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37°17′29″N 36°15′25″E / 37.291389°N 36.256944°E / 37.291389; 36.256944