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Anatolian Writing

BY:Avdo Sahbaz

Central Anatolia and throughout the Hittite Empire.

Carians

Hittites

Isaurians

Lutescans

Luwians

Lycaonians

Lycians

Lydians

Mysians

Palaics

Pamphylians

Pisidians

Some of the Anatolian writing is also from the Hittites which were a group of people who ancient Anatolian people.

Theses were all around the time of

There was occasionally some use of Anatolian Hieroglyphs to write foreign material like Hurrian theonyms, or glosses in Urartian.Most individual Anatolian writing

spreaded really quickly.

There is a dog named after the Anatolian's it is called the Anatolain Shepard. Its sad because 85 percent of the dogs have too visit the vet every year.As you see in the picture that is the Anatolian Shepard Dog is white and brown. It is as old as Anatolian people itself.

The earliest non-Indo-European texts—and the oldest textual evidence from Anatolia—are the so-called Cappadocian tablets (2000–1735 bce), cuneiform documents kept by the merchants of central Anatolia. They are written in one of the Semitic languages, Old Assyrian, and mainly stem from trading centers such as the ancient city of Nesha (also known as Kanesh; now Kültepe, Tur.). They are very rare to find and are mostly in museums. IT developed in the 3rd millennium.

Credits

Avdo Sahbaz

The most time you would see most Anatolian writing is during the late bronze age and the early iron age. Luwain language is Anatolian writing.

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