| Ḫarapšili | |
|---|---|
| Princess and Queen consort of the Hittites | |
![]() Relief of Hittite women, likely noble ladies  | |
| Predecessor | Kali | 
| Spouse | Hantili I | 
| Issue | Daughter | 
| Father | Maratti | 
| Mother | Ḫaštayara | 
| Religion | Hittite mythology | 
Ḫarapšili (or Ḫarapsili, Harapšili; "š" is pronounced as "s" in "sun") was a Hittite queen during the Old Kingdom of Hittites.[1][2]
Biography
Family
Ḫarapšili was probably a daughter of princess Ḫaštayara and a man called Maratti. Her grandfather was king Hattusili I and her brother was king Mursili I (c. 1556 – 1526 BC).[3]
Marriage
She married a cupbearer named Hantili I. He conspired with Zidanta I and assassinated Mursili, thereafter taking the throne.[4]
The royal blood was preserved in the female line.
She was a mother of one daughter who married Zidanta who became a king.[5]
Death
Ḫarapšili died in Sugziya.[6]
In myth
In one myth is mentioned "The Storm God of Queen Harapsili".[7] This is mentioned in Hittite myths, a book by Harry A. Hoffner.[8]
See also
References
- ↑ The Tawananna in the Hittite kingdom by Shoshana R. Bin-Nun. Online version.
 - ↑ Greeks And Pre-Greeks: Aegean Prehistory And Greek Heroic Tradition by Margalit Finkelberg
 - ↑ Hittite Studies in Honor of Harry A. Hoffner, Jr. by Harry A. Hoffner, Gary M. Beckman, Richard Henry Beal, John Gregory McMahon
 - ↑ Telepinu Proclamation, §10
 - ↑ Reign of Mursili I
 - ↑ The Kingdom of the Hittites by Trevor Bryce
 - ↑ Kaniššuwar by Hans Gustav Güterbock
 - ↑ Hittite myths by Harry A. Hoffner and Gary M. Beckman
 
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