- origin, but
modern scholars generally identify them as proto-Kartvelian.
Tabalians are
often thought to
represent the same
ethnic group.
Tibareni occupied...
-
Shalmaneser III
crossed the Anti-Taurus Mountains,
invaded the
lands of the
Tabalian king Tuwattīs I and destro**** the
settlements in his kingdom,
forcing the...
- some
Tabalians living close to
Phrygian speakers of the
Halys river region bore
Phrygian names: one of
these Phrygian names found in the
Tabalian region...
- king
Shalmaneser III's
invasion of the
Tabalian region which he
conducted in 837 BC. By c. 738 BC, the
Tabalian region,
including Tuwana, had
become a...
- The
Kaska (also Kaška,
later Tabalian Kasku and Gasga) were a
loosely affiliated Bronze Age non-Indo-European
tribal people, who
spoke the unclassified...
- the west was the
kingdom of Ḫilakku, and to the
north it
bordered on the
Tabalian kingdoms,
while its
neighbours were
Gurgum in the north-east, Samʾal in...
- Ištuanda was
located in
northern Cappadocia, in the
northwestern part of the
Tabalian region close to the
kingdom of
Atuna and near what is
presently Aksaray...
- of the state's
early kings might have been one of the 24
kings of the
Tabalian region who
offered tribute to the Neo-****yrian king
Shalmaneser III (r...
-
probably also
fought the Cimmerians, and was
killed in
battle against the
Tabalian ruler Gurdî of Kulummu.
After Sargon II's death, Gurdî's
kingdom grew in...
-
hegemony of the
strongest Tabalian state, Bit-Purutash (sometimes
called "Tabal proper" by
modern historians), over the
other Tabalian rulers. The king of Bit-Purutash...