The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Boğazköy-Hattuša is located in the north of Turkey. It was once the capital of the Hittite Empire, a great power in the late Bronze Age around 1650 to 1200 BC.
The cuneiform tablets discovered there and in other Hittite sites represent one of the largest groups of texts from the ancient Near East. They include thousands of sources in Hittite, an early-attested Indo-European language, as well as numerous fragments in other Anatolian languages, alongside Sumerian, Akkadian, and Hurrian texts.
An innovative digital tool has been offering researchers and students online access to these historical sources since 2023: the
Thesaurus Linguarum Hethaeorum Digitalis (TLH
dig 0.1) which was launched on the
Hethitologie-Portal Mainz platform (HPM). Ever since its initial launch, this thesaurus has become one of the digital tools that Hittitologists use every day, with more than 100,000 accesses per month.
Expansion of the Tool with Many New Options
This tool is now even more powerful: As TLHdig 0.2 it is comprising more than 98% of all published sources—approximately 22,000 XML text documents, many of which consist of multiple rejoined fragments. Currently the corpus consists of almost 400,000 transliterated lines. But that's not all: TLH
dig 1.0, expected in late 2025, will offer complete coverage of all published texts.
Researchers can browse and search texts in transliteration or cuneiform and apply various filters for more complex queries. TLH
dig is embedded within the infrastructure of
Hethitologie-Portal Mainz and is integrated with various digital catalogue tools, media databases, and text editions.
Online Pipeline for New Text Publications
TLH
dig is a community research tool. In compiling the corpus, the TLH
dig team has drawn on digital and analogue resources developed by several generations of Hittitologists, including digital text edition projects on
Hethitologie-Portal Mainz and the contributions of many individual scholars.
As a collaborative tool, TLH
dig features an online submission pipeline for scholars publishing new Hittite cuneiform texts. Users can copy and paste their transliterations into the creator interface and follow the prompts to finalise their submissions. For further guidance, users find support in a Step-by-step Manual.
Through this dynamic approach, TLH
dig will continue to expand alongside the field, ensuring it remains as up-to-date as possible, and both the quantity and quality of the data increases continuously. It thus serves as both a foundation for text editions and a valuable resource for a wide range of research questions and methodologies, including the use of innovative AI approaches.
Funding and Project Management
The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) funded the development of TLH
dig. The project was led by Professor Gerfrid Müller (Mainz Academy of Sciences and Literature / University of Würzburg), Professor Doris Prechel (University of Mainz), Professor Elisabeth Rieken (University of Marburg), and Professor Daniel Schwemer (University of Würzburg).
Weblink
TLH
dig on Hethitologie-Portal Mainz:
https://www.hethport.uni-wuerzburg.de/TLHdig/
Türkçe versiyonu için buraya tıklayınız
https://www.hethport.uni-wuerzburg.de/TLHdig/press-release-TR-2025-03.php