-
Tarḫunna or Tarḫuna/i was the
Hittite weather god. He was also
referred to as the "Weather god of Heaven" or the "Lord of the Land of Hatti". Tarḫunna...
-
defeated god, but
Tarhunna's son
marries a
daughter of
Illuyanka and is able to
retrieve Tarhunna's stolen body parts,
whereupon Tarhunna kills Illuyanka...
- the
chief Goddess of
Hittite mythology. Her
companion is the
weather god
Tarḫunna. She
protected the
Hittite kingdom and was
called the "Queen of all lands...
- It is
presumed that the
names of the
Hittite and
Luwian weather gods,
Tarḫunna and Tarḫunz,
while etymologically Indo-European, were
meant to resemble...
-
early Iron Age Anatolia. He is
closely ****ociated with the
Hittite god
Tarḫunna and the
Hurrian god Teshub. The name of the Proto-Anatolian
weather god...
-
weather gods,
including Mesopotamian Ishkur/Adad,
Hurrian Teshub and
Hittite Tarhunna Im (Korean surname) Yan (surname) (Cantonese romanization: Im), a surname...
- thunder-god
Teshub who is
equivalent also to the
Luwian Tarḫunz and
Hittite Tarḫunna. The Old
Norse name
Hrungnir has been
translated as 'brawler', or as 'big...
- (Egyptian mythology)
Shurdh (Albanian mythology) Śuri (Etruscan mythology)
Tarḫunna (Hittite mythology) Tarḫunz (Luwian mythology)
Teshub (Hurrian mythology)...
- livestock. He even
froze the gods Ištanu, Zababa, Inar, Telipinu, and
Tarḫunna, but he
spared the
brothers of Hasameli, his father. Eventually, he was...
-
including Adad and
Ugaritic Baal. In
Anatolia he also
influenced Hittite Tarḫunna and
Luwian Tarḫunz,
though all of
these gods were also
worshipped separately...