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Opere di Amanda H. Podany

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Certainly, in many ways this is a general history of Mesopotamia, one of the earliest human civilizations. Podany follows the developments from about 4000 BCE (the Uruk period) to the Persian Empire (about 500 BCE), although the emphasis is on the period 2500-600 BCE. She summarizes the latest scientific insights well and also warns in time about gaps and speculative views. But the greatest strength of this book is that it tries to focus on concrete people. As Podany herself puts it: “In this book I will take you behind many of those doors to listen in on men and women from the very ancient past. Some of them were famous in their time and wanted to be remembered; they would no doubt be delighted to know that their names have lived on so long after their deaths. Others had no way to make a mark on history; they were illiterate and powerless, subject to the whims of their employers and leaders or the vagaries of the climate and agricultural pests. But we know about them anyway.” It is not always possible to portray ordinary people, but it is still a nice attempt. Absolutely worth it!
More in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/5107476686.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
bookomaniac | Oct 7, 2023 |
This isn't a book about history, it's a book about the author.
 
Segnalato
TheCriticalTimes | 1 altra recensione | Feb 18, 2023 |
The flood plain of Mesopotamia (the area generally covers modern Iraq plus the head of the Persian Gulf and parts of southeast Turkey, west Iran, northeastern Syria and northern Kuwait) has thousands of years worth of silt laid down by the floods of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. It is extremely flat and unless things go horribly wrong somewhere, the flood seasons are predicable. And the land is flat - so building irrigation canals was extremely easy. So there was no surprise that around 6,000 BCE, farmers started to move into the region from the neighboring hills or that bigger and bigger settlement start appearing - water and food is all someone needs after all. Less than 3,000 later, writing somehow gets invented and written history begins.

But this is not where Amanda H. Podany starts her series - she goes back to the cultures in the area, back to the Natufian villages of around 12,500 BCE and starts the story there. Because the first cities did not just show up out of nowhere in the 4th Millennium BCE - they were a direct result from what happened before that. But once they appeared, there was no way back.

There is a lot we do not know about that period - a lot of the cities that are known to exist had not been excavated yet - some of them because they cannot find them (the geography had changed a bit - although in this region the coastal areas had moved toward the gulf so at least they are not under water as is the case in a lot of other areas), some are under existing cities (making it almost impossible to really excavate) and then there is the little problem of the current situation in the area - the whole region had been in the news in the last decade because of ISIS and their shenanigans. Different historians put the start of the Mesopotamian civilization anywhere between 3,500 BCE (the time of Uruk) to 3,100 BCE (the time we know writing was used extensively) and almost any time within a few centuries of these dates. On the other side, things are a lot better defined: in 539 BCE, after having concurred everything else in the area, the king of the first Persian Empire (known in history as the Achaemenid Empire) Cyrus the Great walks into Babylon unopposed and puts an end to a 2,500-3,000 years of independent local rule in the region. The majority of these lectures deal with these 2,500-3,000 years - the time between the city-states of Sumer to the fall of the Neo-Babylonian empire. When it finally falls to Cyrus, an era finishes - the area will become a province for different empires (with some interludes of local kingdoms in the cases where the ruling empire prefers vassal kingdoms to assigning rulers). But that is a different story.

Amanda H. Podany is a historian, specializing in the Ancient Near East and more specifically in the Hana kingdom (a small Syrian kingdom in the general vicinity of Mesopotamia). That probably makes her one of the best people to develop and deliver these lectures - a specialist in one of the bigger kingdoms can overwhelm the lectures, pulling towards 'their' kingdom. Instead, we get a walk through history - because that continuous local rule was not exactly peaceful - the states changed, the first empires were born (and fell) but the continuity between them was always there - in their beliefs, language(s) and practices. And no matter how you look at it and which dates you prefer, the history of Ancient Mesopotamia spans half the written history of humanity.

You do not need to know anything about the region - the course serves as a perfectly good introduction. If you do know things, it can be an overview (and I suspect you still will learn new things). Podany peppers the story with her own memories of excavation and research - which makes the lectures even better - learning how things are discovered and how a single discovery turns the story on its head makes one understand the whole problem with Ancient History even more. And despite the huge amount of material, it is not just the story of the political entities - it is a story of the peoples and the civilizations of one of the places where urban civilizations began (and of course, it is a story of their neighbors - as the centuries progressed, more and more of them show up and become important). The lectures have all the names everyone had heard of and a lot of name which only a student of the era would know. But they never feel overwhelming.

The Audible version of the course comes with a PDF which has the highlights, the spelling of the names and kingdoms, a lot of maps (relevant maps per lecture) and an extensive bibliography (per lecture and overall).

I really enjoyed that course. Highly recommended.

The complete list of lectures:
1. Uncovering Near Eastern Civilization
2. Natufian Villagers and Early Settlements
3. Neolithic Farming, Trade, and Pottery
4. Eridu and Other Towns in the Ubaid Period
5. Uruk, the World’s Biggest City
6. Mesopotamia’s First Kings and the Military
7. Early Dynastic Workers and Worshipers
8. Lugalzagesi of Umma and Sargon of Akkad
9. Akkadian Empire Arts and Gods
10. The Fall of Akkad and Gudea of Lagash
11. Ur III Households, Accounts, and Ziggurats
12. Migrants and Old Assyrian Merchants
13. Royalty and Palace Intrigue at Mari
14. War and Society in Hammurabi’s Time
15. Justice in the Old Babylonian Period
16. The Hana Kingdom and Clues to a Dark Age
17. Princess Tadu-Hepa, Diplomacy, and Marriage
18. Land Grants and Royal Favor in Mittani
19. The Late Bronze Age and the End of Peace
20. Assyria Ascending
21. Ashurbanipal’s Library and Gilgamesh
22. Neo-Assyrian Empire, Warfare, and Collapse
23. Babylon and the New Year’s Festival
24. End of the Neo-Babylonian Empire
… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
AnnieMod | 1 altra recensione | Mar 22, 2022 |
I absolutely enjoyed this book. From Amanda Podany I already read her 'Very short introduction to the ancient history of the Near East' and that was a rather boring book. This, on the other hand, gives a vivid insight into the psychology of the monarchs of the time, roughly the period between 2300 and 1300 BCE. In that period there was a relatively intense correspondence between the kings of the different Mesopotamian, Northern Syrian and Egyptian empires. And with correspondence you must indeed imagine very heavy, rather large clay tablets with Cuneiform inscriptions, almost always in Akkadian, the diplomatic language of the time. This communication was not so much formalistic, on the contrary, the tone and content of the messages reveal quite a bit about the power relations and psychological attitude of those involved. More on that in my History account on Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3545877952… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
bookomaniac | 2 altre recensioni | Feb 14, 2022 |

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Opere
33
Utenti
493
Popolarità
#50,127
Voto
4.1
Recensioni
7
ISBN
31
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