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Social life among the Assyrians and Babylonians
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- Nombre de pages67
- FormatePub
- ISBN859-65--4791431-0
- EAN8596547914310
- Date de parution29/06/2026
- Protection num.Digital Watermarking
- Taille1 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurGOOD PRESS
Résumé
In Social Life among the Assyrians and Babylonians, A. H. Sayce reconstructs the everyday world of ancient Mesopotamia through laws, letters, contracts, religious practices, and archaeological evidence. Rather than offering a mere political history, the book attends to family structure, class relations, trade, slavery, education, and domestic custom, presenting civilization through the habits of ordinary and elite life alike.
Sayce writes in the lucid, synthetic style characteristic of early Assyriology, combining philological learning with a broad Victorian ambition to make the ancient Near East intelligible to modern readers. The work stands as an important example of how cuneiform discoveries reshaped historical understanding in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Sayce, a distinguished British Assyriologist and orientalist, was among the leading interpreters of newly deciphered Near Eastern texts for an English-speaking audience.
His deep engagement with Semitic languages, biblical history, and the archaeological recovery of Mesopotamia equipped him to write a study that links textual scholarship with cultural history. The book reflects his wider intellectual project: to illuminate the societies behind the inscriptions and to demonstrate the complexity of civilizations often known only through scripture or imperial chronicles.
This volume will reward readers interested in ancient history, comparative civilization, and the origins of urban social life. It is especially recommended for those who seek a learned yet accessible portrait of Assyrian and Babylonian society beyond kings and conquests.
Sayce writes in the lucid, synthetic style characteristic of early Assyriology, combining philological learning with a broad Victorian ambition to make the ancient Near East intelligible to modern readers. The work stands as an important example of how cuneiform discoveries reshaped historical understanding in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Sayce, a distinguished British Assyriologist and orientalist, was among the leading interpreters of newly deciphered Near Eastern texts for an English-speaking audience.
His deep engagement with Semitic languages, biblical history, and the archaeological recovery of Mesopotamia equipped him to write a study that links textual scholarship with cultural history. The book reflects his wider intellectual project: to illuminate the societies behind the inscriptions and to demonstrate the complexity of civilizations often known only through scripture or imperial chronicles.
This volume will reward readers interested in ancient history, comparative civilization, and the origins of urban social life. It is especially recommended for those who seek a learned yet accessible portrait of Assyrian and Babylonian society beyond kings and conquests.









