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A History of the Ancient Near East, Ca. 3000-323 Bc - 3rd Edition

English · Paperback / Softback

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Incorporating the latest scholarly research, the third edition of A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 BC presents a comprehensive overview of the multicultural civilizations of the ancient Near East.
* Integrates the most up-to-date research, and includes a richer selection of supplementary materials
* Addresses the wide variety of political, social, and cultural developments in the ancient Near East
* Updated features include new "Key Debate" boxes at the end of each chapter to engage students with various perspectives on a range of critical issues; a comprehensive timeline of events; and 46 new illustrations, including 12 color photos
* Features a new chapter addressing governance and continuity in the region during the Persian Empire
* Offers in-depth, accessible discussions of key texts and sources, including the Bible and the Epic of Gilgamesh

List of contents

List of Illustrations viii
 
List of Charts xi
 
List of Maps xii
 
List of Debates xiv
 
List of Boxes xv
 
List of Documents xvi
 
Preface xviii
 
Author's Note xxi
 
1 Introductory Concerns 1
 
1.1 What Is the Ancient Near East? 1
 
1.2 The Sources 3
 
1.3 Geography 6
 
1.4 Prehistoric Developments 10
 
Part I City-States 19
 
2 Origins: The Uruk Phenomenon 21
 
2.1 The Origins of Cities 23
 
2.2 The Development of Writing and Administration 30
 
2.3 The "Uruk Expansion" 37
 
2.4 Uruk's Aftermath 41
 
3 Competing City-States: The Early Dynastic Period 44
 
3.1 The Written Sources and Their Historical Uses 45
 
3.2 Political Developments in Southern Mesopotamia 48
 
3.3 The Wider Near East 56
 
3.4 Early Dynastic Society 60
 
3.5 Scribal Culture 63
 
4 Political Centralization in the Late Third Millennium 67
 
4.1 The Kings of Akkad 68
 
4.2 The Third Dynasty of Ur 79
 
5 The Near East in the Early Second Millennium 90
 
5.1 Nomads and Sedentary People 92
 
5.2 Babylonia 95
 
5.3 Assyria and the East 100
 
5.4 Mari and the West 107
 
6 The Growth of Territorial States in the Early Second Millennium 113
 
6.1 Shamshi-Adad and the Kingdom of Upper Mesopotamia 115
 
6.2 Hammurabi's Babylon 118
 
6.3 The Old Hittite Kingdom 127
 
6.4 The "Dark Age" 131
 
Part II Territorial States 135
 
7 The Club of the Great Powers 137
 
7.1 The Political System 138
 
7.2 Political Interactions: Diplomacy and Trade 142
 
7.3 Regional Competition: Warfare 151
 
7.4 Shared Ideologies and Social Organizations 153
 
8 The Western States of the Late Second Millennium 159
 
8.1 Mittani 160
 
8.2 The Hittite New Kingdom 165
 
8.3 Syria-Palestine 174
 
9 Kassites, Assyrians, and Elamites 182
 
9.1 Babylonia 183
 
9.2 Assyria 190
 
9.3 The Middle Elamite Kingdom 195
 
10 The Collapse of the Regional System and Its Aftermath 202
 
10.1 The Events 203
 
10.2 Interpretation 210
 
10.3 The Aftermath 213
 
Part III Empires 221
 
11 The Near East at the Start of the First Millennium 223
 
11.1 The Eastern States 224
 
11.2 The West 232
 
12 The Rise of Assyria 246
 
12.1 Patterns of Assyrian Imperialism 247
 
12.2 The Historical Record 253
 
12.3 Ninth-Century Expansion 255
 
12.4 Internal Assyrian Decline 261
 
13 Assyria's World Domination 265
 
13.1 The Creation of an Imperial Structure 266
 
13.2 The Defeat of the Great Rivals 270
 
13.3 The Administration and Ideology of the Empire 277
 
13.4 Assyrian Culture 279
 
13.5 Assyria's Fall 284
 
14 The Medes and Babylonians 289
 
14.1 The Medes and the Anatolian States 290
 
14.2 The Neo-Babylonian Dynasty 294
 
15 The Creation of a World Empire: Persia 308
 
15.1 The Sources and Their Challenges 309
 
15.2 The Rise of Persia and Its Expansion 310
 
15.3 Governance of the Subject States 315
 
15.4 The Creation of an Imperial Structure 319
 
16 Governing a World Empire: Persia 327
 
16.1 Political Developments 327
 
16.2 Administration of the Empire 331
 
16.3 Local Forms of Persian Administration 335
 
16.4 The End of the Empire 342
 
Epilogue 346
 
King Lists 348
 
Guide to Furth

About the author










Marc Van De Mieroop is Professor of History at Columbia University. He is the author of many books on various aspects of the histories of the ancient Near East and Egypt, including The Ancient Mesopotamian City (1997, 1999), King Hammurabi of Babylon (Blackwell, 2004), The Eastern Mediterranean in the Age of Ramesses II (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), and A History of Ancient Egypt (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010).

Product details

Authors Marc van de Mieroop, Marc Van De Mieroop, Marc Van De Mieroop
Publisher Wiley, John and Sons Ltd
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 24.07.2015
 
EAN 9781118718162
ISBN 978-1-118-71816-2
No. of pages 424
Dimensions 172 mm x 245 mm x 20 mm
Series Blackwell History of the Ancient World
Subjects Non-fiction book

Geschichte, Antike, History, Classical Studies, Humanistische Studien, Ancient & Classical History, Antike u. klassische Geschichte, Geschichte / Naher u. Mittlerer Osten, Near & Middle Eastern History

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