Results 121 to 130 of about 266 (180)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
2016
This handbook treats the different types of shields used by soldiers in the Neo-Assyrian army and their opponents. Written, visual, and material sources are analyzed to illustrate practical aspects of defensive weaponry in the ancient Near East in the first millennium B.C.
openaire +2 more sources
This handbook treats the different types of shields used by soldiers in the Neo-Assyrian army and their opponents. Written, visual, and material sources are analyzed to illustrate practical aspects of defensive weaponry in the ancient Near East in the first millennium B.C.
openaire +2 more sources
The Neo-Assyrian Empire in the Southwest
2021Abstract The Neo-Assyrian empire—the first large empire of the ancient world—had attracted a great deal of public attention ever since the spectacular discoveries of the nineteenth century. The southwestern part of this empire, located in the lands of the Bible, is archaeologically speaking the best-known region in the world, and its ...
openaire +1 more source
In the 8th and 7th centuries BCE, the Assyrians built the first true empire in world history. They developed governamental structures, imperial ideology, culture and religion. Assyrian monarchy became a model of power even beyond its final collapse in 612 BCE.
S. Ponchia, G. B. Lanfranchi
openaire +1 more source
S. Ponchia, G. B. Lanfranchi
openaire +1 more source
2009
Abstract The Neo-Assyrian (hereafter NA) Empire is the name given to a polity centered on the upper Tigris River that at its height in the seventh century B.C.E. controlled territory extending from the Zagros Mountains in the east to the Levant (Syria-Palestine) and much of Egypt in the west and from the Persian Gulf in the south to the ...
openaire +1 more source
Abstract The Neo-Assyrian (hereafter NA) Empire is the name given to a polity centered on the upper Tigris River that at its height in the seventh century B.C.E. controlled territory extending from the Zagros Mountains in the east to the Levant (Syria-Palestine) and much of Egypt in the west and from the Persian Gulf in the south to the ...
openaire +1 more source
Reflections on Neo-Assyrian Archives
2003Abstract The period of the later Assyrian empire, from the ninth to the seventh century bc, is at present one of the most thriving branches of ancient Near Eastern historical and philological research, owing to a variety of recent archaeological discoveries and to a collective effort at systematization of previously acquired textual data.
openaire +1 more source
2020
Yeni Asur sanatının kökleri MÖ III. bine dayanmaktadır. Genellikle av, savaş, imar faaliyetleri, mitolojik sahneler gibi konuların işlendiği sanat, çoğunlukla propaganda içermektedir. 400 yıllık hâkimiyetleri boyunca yenilgilerinden yazıtlarında bahsetmeyen krallar görsel sanatlarda kendilerini daima yenilmez, güçlü ve Tanrı Asur’un elçisi olarak ...
COŞKUN, İsmail, DEMİRTAŞ, Dilara
openaire +1 more source
Yeni Asur sanatının kökleri MÖ III. bine dayanmaktadır. Genellikle av, savaş, imar faaliyetleri, mitolojik sahneler gibi konuların işlendiği sanat, çoğunlukla propaganda içermektedir. 400 yıllık hâkimiyetleri boyunca yenilgilerinden yazıtlarında bahsetmeyen krallar görsel sanatlarda kendilerini daima yenilmez, güçlü ve Tanrı Asur’un elçisi olarak ...
COŞKUN, İsmail, DEMİRTAŞ, Dilara
openaire +1 more source
The End of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
2022The Neo-Assyrian empire collapsed under the attack of Babylonians and Medes after some years of harsh military confrontation, which rapidly reached the heart of the empire, and ended with the destruction of its major cities and the capital Nineveh (612 BC).
openaire +1 more source

