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Phoenicia Under the Achaemenid Empire

2019
This chapter covers several aspects of Achaemenid Phoenicia, including literary sources, epigraphy, numismatics, and material culture. Achaemenid Phoenicia was characterized by a continuity of material culture from the Neo-Babylonian period. The extant sources—literary, epigraphic, and numismatic—evince a conglomerate of independent city-states ...
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The Achaemenid Empire: a Babylonian perspective

Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society, 1988
For over 2000 years views of the Persian empire founded by Cyrus c. 550 B.C. and conquered by Alexander in the space of ten years between 334 and 323 have been constructed on the basis of Greek literary sources (in which I would include historical works, such as Herodotus' histories) and some sections of the Old Testament.
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Attic Pottery in the Achaemenid Empire

American Journal of Archaeology, 1977
Attic pottery in the sixth to fourth centuries B.C. achieves a fairly broad range within the Persian Empire, taking in Anatolia, Cyprus, Syria, Palestine, the Nile Valley down to Nubia, and, in a limited quantity, appearing at the distant capitals of Babylon and Susa.' Within this range, the same types of Attic pots turn up from site to site, most of ...
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The “End” of the Achaemenid-Persian Empire: Caesura and Transformation in Dialogue

Universal- Und Kulturhistorische Studien, 2022
Julian Degen, Robert Rollinger
exaly  

Aspects of Empire in Achaemenid Sardis

Journal of Field Archaeology, 2002
Elizabeth P. Baughan   +1 more
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The Achaemenid Persian Empire

2017
William H. Stiebing, Susan N. Helft
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