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The Broken Scepter: Babylon, Assyria, and the Collapse of an Age
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233881985
- EAN9798233881985
- Date de parution12/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
The Broken Scepter: Babylon, Assyria, and the Collapse of an Age In the closing years of the second millennium BC, a Babylonian king seized his throne by murdering his own nephew, won a stunning victory over Assyria's captured gods, and then watched fire, drought, and famine undo everything he built. The Broken Scepter tells the story of Marduk-nadin-a??e, the sixth king of Babylon's Second Dynasty of Isin, whose eighteen-year reign carried his kingdom from the wreckage of Kassite collapse to the ashes of its own burned palace.
Drawing on boundary-stone inscriptions, royal chronicles, an astrologer's anxious warning about failing rains, and the physical record locked in cave stone and lake sediment, this book reconstructs a sophisticated, literate civilization brought to its knees not by any single catastrophe but by the convergence of usurpation, war, and a climatic disaster no army could defeat. It follows scribes whose family service outlasted dynasties, a quiet courtier whose patience would eventually win him a crown, and a king whose own end was never recorded, only euphemized.
Spanning the fall of Kassite Babylon to a Neo-Assyrian king's inscription written four centuries later, this is a story about the limits of even the most capable governance when confronted with forces beyond any throne's control.
Drawing on boundary-stone inscriptions, royal chronicles, an astrologer's anxious warning about failing rains, and the physical record locked in cave stone and lake sediment, this book reconstructs a sophisticated, literate civilization brought to its knees not by any single catastrophe but by the convergence of usurpation, war, and a climatic disaster no army could defeat. It follows scribes whose family service outlasted dynasties, a quiet courtier whose patience would eventually win him a crown, and a king whose own end was never recorded, only euphemized.
Spanning the fall of Kassite Babylon to a Neo-Assyrian king's inscription written four centuries later, this is a story about the limits of even the most capable governance when confronted with forces beyond any throne's control.



