The world's first known empires took shape in Mesopotamia between the
eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea and the Persian Gulf,
beginning around 2350 BCE. The next 2,500 years witnessed sustained
imperial growth, bringing a growing share of humanity under the
control of ever-fewer states. Two thousand years ago, just four major
powers--the Roman, Parthian, Kushan, and Han empires--ruled perhaps
two-thirds of the earth's entire population. Yet despite empires'
prominence in the early history of civilization, there have been
surprisingly few attempts to study the dynamics of ancient empires in
the western Old World comparatively. Such grand comparisons were
popular in the eighteenth century, but scholars then had only Greek
and Latin literature and the Hebrew Bible as evidence, and necessarily
framed the problem in different, more limited, terms. Near Eastern
texts, and knowledge of their languages, only appeared in large
amounts in the later nineteenth century. Neither Karl Marx nor Max
Weber could make much use of this material, and not until the 1920s
were there enough archaeological data to make syntheses of early
European and west Asian history possible. But one consequence of the
increase in empirical knowledge was that twentieth-century scholars
generally defined the disciplinary and geographical boundaries of
their specialties more narrowly than their Enlightenment predecessors
had done, shying away from large questions and cross-cultural
comparisons. As a result, Greek and Roman empires have largely been
studied in isolation from those of the Near East. This volume is
designed to address these deficits and encourage dialogue across
disciplinary boundaries by examining the fundamental features of the
successive and partly overlapping imperial states that dominated much
of the Near East and the Mediterranean in the first millennia BCE and
CE. A substantial introductory discussion of recent thought on the
mechanisms of imperial state formation prefaces the five newly
commissioned case studies of the Neo-Assyrian, Achaemenid Persian,
Athenian, Roman, and Byzantine empires. A final chapter draws on the
findings of evolutionary psychology to improve our understanding of
ultimate causation in imperial predation and exploitation in a wide
range of historical systems from all over the globe. Contributors
include John Haldon, Jack Goldstone, Peter Bedford, Josef Wiesehöfer,
Ian Morris, Walter Scheidel, and Keith Hopkins, whose essay on Roman
political economy was completed just before his death in 2004.
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State Power from Assyria to Byzantium
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199888177
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter