The Hittites were most known for their excellent ironwork skills.
All I know is that the Hittites invented steel tools and the chariot
The Hittites are a people who established an empire in what is now Turkey in the second millenium BCE, roughly between 1550 and 1000
Persia, a province of the Median empire, absorbed Media and, with this combined strength, King Cyrus (the Great) set out to take over the Babylonian empire, absorbing it into his growing empire.)
they made iron which is still used today. If you want to find more information just google Hittites iron making
they took away their land.
the Assyrian, hittites, kassites, chaldean, and babylonian war
The Hittites, Kassites, Assyrains and the Chaldeans conquered all of Mesopotamia after the Babylonians
economic determinism
Those are two completely different ethnic groups who never lived near each other or had any contact between them.
O. R. Gurney has written: 'Anatolia' -- subject(s): Hittites 'The Sultantepe tablets' -- subject(s): Akkadian Cuneiform inscriptions, Assyro-Babylonian literature, Cuneiform inscriptions, Akkadian 'Anatolia c.1600-1380 B.C' 'The Hittites' -- subject(s): Hittites 'Some Aspects of Hittite Religion' -- subject(s): Gods, Hittite, Hittite Gods, Hittites, Religion
Under the rules of Hammurabi's successors, the Babylonian Empire was weakened by military pressure from the Hittites, who sacked Babylon around 1531 BC. However it was the Kassites who eventually conquered Babylon and ruled Mesopotamia for 400 years, adopting parts of the Babylonian culture, including Hammurabi's code of laws until the Persian Empire took the city.
Hittites
597 BC.
yes, the Hittites did have kings in the ancient world
Ramses the great made a treaty with the hittites
The Hittites went out to war against the Ammorites.