Results 151 to 160 of about 7,059 (200)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Tell Jemmeh, Philistia and the Neo-Assyrian Empire during the Late Iron Age
Levant, 2014David Ben-Shlomo
exaly +2 more sources
The Neo-Assyrian Adê Protocol and the Administration of the Empire
the article analyses administrative and juridical instruments and dynamics of political control implemented by the Neo- Assyrian empire in provincial areas. It considers in particular the meaning and function of the loyalty treaties in relation to the recent discovery of a document of this type in the site of Tell Taynat, capital of the Assyrian ...
PONCHIA, Simonetta
openaire +2 more sources
On Courtiers in the Neo-Assyrian Empire: ša-rēši and mazzāz pāni
Altorientalische Forschungen, 2014Pirngruber, Reinhard +1 more
exaly +4 more sources
The Classical Review, 2022
lines of research, such as a diachronic study of the interactions between the Phoenicians and ‘locals in the Mediterranean’ (p. 316). Overall, the recognition of a unique Phoenician identity could benefit from a more in-depth discussion of the socio ...
Lucas G. Freire
semanticscholar +1 more source
lines of research, such as a diachronic study of the interactions between the Phoenicians and ‘locals in the Mediterranean’ (p. 316). Overall, the recognition of a unique Phoenician identity could benefit from a more in-depth discussion of the socio ...
Lucas G. Freire
semanticscholar +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
The fluidity of empire: hydraulics of neo-assyrian canal systems in relation to their possible uses [PDF]
The Neo-Assyrian empire offers a clear example of the key relationship between imperial power and water management. Irrigated landscapes under the direct impulse of the Assyrian state were important during its imperial heydays of the late 9th to 7th ...
Maurits W Ertsen
exaly +2 more sources

