From Egypt to Babylon: The International Age 1550-500 BC

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Harvard University Press, 2008 - Art - 208 pages

For those who believe that globalization is a purely modern phenomenon, this book holds a startling and absorbing lesson. From Egypt to Babylon immerses readers in a world of exotic empires and states as they waxed and waned and interacted in a period of extraordinary internationalismâe"all before the rise of the Persian Empire.

The ancient Egyptians, Minoans, Mycenaeans, Hittites, Canaanites, Hurrians, Aramaeans, Israelites, Urartians, Mannaeans, Assyrians, Phrygians, Kassites, Chaldaeans, Elamites, Scythians, Medes, and Persians: these are the societies who for a millennia peopled the world from the Aegean and Egypt in the west to what we know now as Iraq and Iran in the east. In a concise introduction, illustrated with objects drawn largely from the collections of the British Museum, this book takes the reader through the vast and varied landscape of this period, where a far-flung world was linked by military expansion, diplomatic relations, and movement of goods and peoples that brought about profound cultural exchanges and technological and social revolutions. The story brings the reader from the foundations of the Egyptian empire through the turmoil at the end of the second millennium bce to the unprecedented political unification of the whole region by kings of Persia.

From Egypt to Babylon weaves together the political histories of the regionâe(tm)s diverse societies for the first time, tracing shifting fortunes and burgeoning colonies, trading connections and cultural pressures in what was truly the worldâe(tm)s first international age.

 

Contents

Contents
6
CHAPTER 1
20
CHAPTER 3
47
CHAPTER 4
71
CHAPTER 5
90
CHAPTER 6
107
CHAPTER 8
128
CHAPTER 9
145
CHAPTER 10
164
CHAPTER 11
187
Further Reading
205
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About the author (2008)

Paul Collins is Curator of later Mesopotamian collections, Department of the Middle East, The British Museum. He is the author of The Uruk Phenomenon.

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