First extant peace treaty: between Hittites and Egypt |
Queen Puduhepa pressed her seal into the first extant peace
treaty in history between her kingdom of the Hittites (in what is now Turkey)
and Rameses the II, Pharaoh of Egypt during the Late Bronze Age. Her letters,
treaties, religious codifications and judicial decrees came to light when
archaeologists dug up the great cuneiform libraries of her capital, Hattusha.
She reigned for some seventy years. At about fifteen she married Hattusili, who
later became the Great King of the Hittites and she the Queen. Had her kingdom
not been buried by the sands of time until the mid 20th century, she
would be as famous as Cleopatra—trust me.
Blessings on all those archaeologists and Hittitologists who
found and translated the evidence. With their scholarship and some imagination
of my own, I am turning this recently uncovered queen into an ancient sort of
sleuth in a mystery series.
There are a lot of gaps in a world that came to us in such a
state of ruin, yet we are able to patch together some of the events that made
up the life of this formidable queen—and might have occured in a reconstructed
day.
As Puduhepa’s hypothetical day begins, she reaches for that
first glass of water to quench her morning
Reconstructed walls of Hittite capital Hattusha |
It is worthwhile to note, that according to the Hittites, a
hair could be used to place a curse on the king or queen. Just slip the correct
hair in with the proper incantations and you could shorten the king’s life,
cause him a wasting illness, or any number of other mysterious problems. Curses
were a regular concern—which explains the stiff penalty in this case, although
ritual purity in general for the royal family was a tremendous concern for
reasons of proper relationship and harmony with the gods rather than notions of
healthfulness.
Once Puduhepa refreshes herself with water free from any
curses, she might prepare herself to go to the temple to make offerings and
pray. Puduhepa’s love and devotion for her husband were legendary. They met
accidentally (except they both attributed it to their patron goddess Ishtar)
and it was love at first sight. In a dream Ishtar commanded Hattusili to marry
Puduhepa. Puduhepa also had dreams from Ishtar regularly and these two mystics,
who led extremely pragmatic lives, found great solace in each other. So when
Hattusili was ill, as he often was both with a mysterious eye ailment and
something painful in his feet, Puduhepa prayed fervently for his health.
Hittite goddess with child |
In the inner sanctum of the temple where only the royal
family and the priests were allowed access, Pudhepa makes offerings to the
divine statues of the gods. Each day these gods are offered food and drink,
dressed and bathed. In this brightly frescoed space before gold and silver
statues draped in finery, Puduhepa offers a goat or bull for sacrifice and she
has selected bread offerings from a myriad of shapes—today perhaps a hand or
bird—and her breads are sweetened with honey and soaked in olive oil.
To insure her husband’s health she beseeches the gods to
bring Hattusili long life and well-being. In one of her extant prayers she
opens by reminding the Sun-goddess Arinna that Hattusili had recaptured the
goddess’s sacred city of Nerik and now the traditional offerings to her are
once again being made there. After this reminder of the goddess’s debt to
Hattusili, Puduhepa goes on to make this plea, “Since I, Puduhepa, am a woman
of the birthstool (a midwife—multi-talented queen), … have pity on me, O
Sun-goddess of Arinna, my lady, and grant me what I ask of you! Grant life
Ram's head rhyton libation cup for offerings |
Next in her day she could select from a wide range of
activities we know she engaged in. She served as her husband’s primary source
of counsel, as a priestess of Ishtar, as supreme judge for the Hittite Kingdom,
as a midwife, as an astute political negotiator, and as a marriage broker
between great rulers such as Rameses and her husband’s many children (by concubines
as well as Puduhepa’s own).
figs |
At the end of her busy day she had a supper of lamb roasted
in cumin and garlic with a side dish of lentils and leeks. Perhaps some
cucumber in yogurt cooled her tongue and the exotic, imported treat of dates
was laid out on a silver tray for her enjoyment. More likely the finishing
sweet came in the form of dried figs and apricots. She might even have drunk
her beer through a straw, which as near as we can tell was a filter to keep the
bits of grain out of one’s mouth.