This volume is a unique blend of comprehensive overviews on archaeological, philological, linguistic, and historical issues at the forefront of Anatolian scholarship. The chapters unfold nearly ten thousand years (ca. 10,000-323 BCE) combining reviews of current scholarship in Anatolian studies with new and cutting edge research for future directions of study.
Sharon R. Steadman is Professor of Anthropology at SUNY Cortland and Director of the University's Brooks Museum.
Gregory McMahon is Associate Professor of Classics, Humanities, and Italian Studies at the University of New Hampshire.
1. Introduction: The Handbook of Ancient Anatolia
PART I: The Archaeology of Anatolia: Background and Definitions
2. The Land and Peoples of Anatolia Through Ancient Eyes
3. A History of the Pre-Classical Archaeology of Anatolia
4. Anatolian Chronology and Terminology
PART II: Chronology and Geography
5. The Neolithic on the Plateau
6. The Neolithic in Southeastern Anatolia
7. The Chalcolithic on the Plateau
8. The Chalcolithic in Southeastern Anatolia
9. The Chalcolithic in Eastern Anatolia
The Early Bronze Age
10. The Early Bronze Age on the Plateau
11. The Early Bronze Age in Southeastern Anatolia
12. Eastern Anatolia in the Early Bronze Age
The Middle Bronze Age
13. The Karum Period on the Plateau
14. Southeastern and Eastern Anatolia in the Middle Bronze Age
The Late Bronze Age
15. The Late Bronze Age in the West and the Aegean
16. The Hittites on the Plateau
17. Southern and Southeastern Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age
The Iron Age
19. The Iron Age of Southeastern Anatolia
20. The Iron Age in Eastern Anatolia
21. The Greeks in Western Anatolia
PART III: Philological and Historical Topics
23. Luwian and the Luwians
24. Urartian and the Urartians
25. Phrygian and the Phrygians
26. A Political History of Hittite Anatolia
27. Anatolia:The First Millennium in Historical Context
28. Monuments and Memory: Architecture and Visual Culture in Ancient Anatolian History
PART IV: Thematic and Specific Topics
29. Eastern Thrace: The Contact Zone Between Anatolia and the Balkans
30. Anatolia and the Transcaucasus: Themes and Variations ca. 6400-1500 BCE
31. Indo-European and Indo-Europeans in Anatolia
32. Troy in Regional and International Context
33. Assyrians and Urartians
34. The Greeks in Anatolia: From the Migrations to Alexander
From Pastoralists to Empires: Critical Issues
35. The Halaf Tradition
36. Millennia in the Middle? Reconsidering the Chalcolithic of Asia Minor
37. Interaction of Uruk and Northern Late Chalcolithic Societies in Anatolia
38. Ancient Landscapes in Southeastern Anatolia
39. Metals and Metallurgy
40. The Hittite State and Empire from Archaeological Evidence
41. The Hittite Empire from Textual Evidence
PART V: Key Sites
43. Çatal Höyük: A Prehistoric Settlement on the Konya Plain
44. Ilipinar: A Neolithic Settlement in the Eastern Marmara Region
45. Arslantepe-Malatya: A Prehistoric and Early Historic Center in Eastern Anatolia
46. Titris Höyük: The Nature and Context of Third Millennium B.C.E. Urbanism in the Upper Euphrates Basin
47. Kültepe-Kanes: A Second Millennium Trading Center on the Central Plateau
48. Key Sites of the Hittite Empire
49. Ayanis: An Iron Age Site in the East
50. Gordion: The Changing Political and Economic Roles of a First Millennium City
51. The Stratigraphy of Kaman-Kalehöyük in Central Anatolia
52. Sardis: A First Millennium Capital in Western Anatolia