The İvriz relief is a Hittite rock relief in south-central Anatolia, located in the town of Aydınkent, formerly called İvriz (modern Turkey, Konya Province, about 17 km south-east of the modern town of Ereğli).
It depicts the late 8th-century BC king Warpalawas and the storm-god Tarhunzas and is accompanied by a hieroglyphic Luwian inscription.
[1] In front of the god's face and behind the king's back are three lines of inscription in Luwian hieroglyphs, naming both figures.
These finds gave support to the idea that the location was a wealthy sanctuary of Tarhunzas patronised by Warpalawas.
The Swedish-born French diplomat Jean Otter described the relief in his Voyage en Turquie... (1748), and was long said to be the first European to have seen it.