The mystery of bronze-era sculptures in Turkey

A series of mysterious bronze sculptures in an ancient place in Hattusa show that the three processions of the gods walking in the direction of the two supreme gods can actually be a kind of calendar. Super stock, scientists claim.

Eberhard Zangger, co-author of the study and president of the international nonprofit study, said that the ancients used the carvings as a calendar, moving stone marks back and forth along the ice. chairs below the order carvings to track time.

Picture 1 of The mystery of bronze-era sculptures in Turkey
The sculpted works in Turkey have been solved.

The full findings have been published, in which researchers claim that under each line of the gods, the signs will be used to track the third lunar day, the month and the third cycle, every 19 years, one more month into the so-called Metonic cycle , to keep up with the Sun.

The carvings are located in a limestone room depicted without roof to the north wall with the sun goddess Hebat and god Teshub, the supreme god of Hittite.

On the east and west walls on either side of the room are the gods marching in 2 processions towards Hebat and Teshub.

The procession of the gods carved on the western wall falls into two groups, one group contains 12 pictures and the remaining 30 people.

The east wall had 17 gods, but following the engravings and gaps in the procession, Dr. Zangger and his colleague Rita Gautschy, a historian from the University of Basel, announced once again that there were two more characters.

The researchers believe that the Hittites used the last procession of 19 carved gods to track progress through the Metonic cycle and find out when it is necessary to add extremely important months every 19 years.