Hittites
The oldest testimony of chariot warfare in the ancient Near East is the Old HittiteAnitta text (18th century BCE), which mentions 40 teams of horses (in the original cuneiform spelling: 40 ṢÍ-IM-TI ANŠE.KUR.RAḪI.A) at the siege of Salatiwara. Since the text mentions teams rather than chariots, the existence of chariots in the 18th century BCE is uncertain. (Before Common Era/Before)
The first certain attestation of chariots in the Hittite empire dates to the late 17th century BCE (Hattusili I).
A Hittite horse-training text is attributed to Kikkuli the Mitanni (15th century BCE).
The Hittites were renowned charioteers.
They developed a new chariot design that had lighter wheels, with four spokes rather than eight, and that held three rather than two warriors.
It could hold three warriors because the wheel was placed in the middle of the chariot and not at the back as in Egyptian chariots.
Hittite prosperity largely depended on their control of trade routes and natural resources, specifically metals. As the Hittites gained dominion over Mesopotamia, tensions flared among the neighboring Assyrians, Hurrians, and Egyptians.
Under Suppiluliuma I, the Hittites conquered Kadesh and, eventually, the whole of Syria.
The Battle of Kadesh in 1274 BCE is likely to have been the largest chariot battle ever fought, involving over 5,000 chariots.”
~https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chariot
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