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This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
In the heart of ancient Anatolia, where rolling hills stretch endlessly beneath the vast Turkish sky and weathered limestone formations rise like ancient sentinels from the earth, lie the ruins of one of the Bronze Age's most powerful and influential capitals. Hattusa, once the mighty center of the Hittite Empire, represents one of archaeology's greatest rediscoveries, a civilization that ruled much of the ancient Near East for over five centuries yet vanished so completely from historical memory that its very existence was unknown to modern scholars until the late 19th century. This remarkable city, whose massive walls and monumental gates still inspire awe among visitors today, served as the political, religious, and cultural heart of an empire that at its zenith rivaled Egypt and Assyria in power and influence.
The geographical setting of Hattusa reflected the strategic acumen of its founders, who chose a location that combined natural defensive advantages with access to vital trade routes and agricultural resources that would support a major urban center. The site, located approximately 150 kilometers east of modern Ankara in the Çorum Province of Turkey, sits on a rocky plateau surrounded by steep gorges and hills that provided natural fortifications while also commanding views over the surrounding countryside. The nearby Kızılırmak River, ancient Halys, ensured adequate water supplies and facilitated transportation and communication with other regions of the growing Hittite realm.
The origins of Hittite civilization trace back to the early 2nd millennium BCE, when Indo-European speaking peoples began establishing themselves in central Anatolia and gradually developed the political and cultural institutions that would enable them to build one of the ancient world's great empires.