PAPVA_50 Early bronze age in the Near East

Faculty of Arts
Spring 2020

The course is not taught in Spring 2020

Extent and Intensity
2/0/0. 3 credit(s). Type of Completion: zk (examination).
Teacher(s)
Zuzanna Wygnańska, Ph.D. (lecturer), Mgr. Inna Mateiciucová, Ph.D. (deputy)
Guaranteed by
doc. PhDr. Jarmila Bednaříková, CSc.
Department of Classical Studies – Faculty of Arts
Contact Person: Jitka Erlebachová
Supplier department: Department of Classical Studies – Faculty of Arts
Course Enrolment Limitations
The course is offered to students of any study field.
Course objectives
The lecture will cover Mesopotamia and Syria-Palestine in the Early Bronze Age. The issues highlighted in the lecture will include main historical and cultural phenomena. Major groups and categories of artefacts, from monumental art to small decorative objects will be presented along with architecture - temples, palaces, fortifications and dwellings - as well as funerary rites. Apart from these main topics the lectures will also provide basic information on the peoples, scripts and languages, religion and other features of the Bronze Age cultures.
Syllabus
  • • 1. Introduction: - The geographic setting and environment; - People, languages, systems of writing, - Chronological systems and periodisation • 2. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Mesopotamia – Early Dynastic Period - Early Dynastic city states – archaeology of cities - Topics: city-states organisation; periodisation; Sumerian King List as a source for historical reconstruction; sacral and secular architecture; art; burial practices – regular customs and curiosities (e.g. the Royal Cemetery of Ur) • 3. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Mesopotamia – Early Dynastic Period (CONTINUATION) - Diyala Basin “civilisation” - Mari - North Mesopotamian city state - Topics: origins of Diyala civilisation; periodisation; city-state organisation; sacral and secular architecture; art; burial customs; domestic space in towns; founding of Mari, contacts with Syria and southern Mesopotamia. • 4. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Syria– The first half of the third millennium BC. - The Ninevite 5 Culture - Topics: the question of non-urban civilisation; Ninevite 5 pottery, burial customs; art and architecture (monumental buildings, granaries, temples from Tell Arbid and Tell Brak); Piedmont Style seals. • 5. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Syria - Urban civilization in Western Syria, - Sites along the middle Euphrates - Topics: transition from nomadism to sedentarism, Ebla city-state; dynastic cult in Western Syria; burial customs (e.g. burial mounds from Ebla); sacral and secular architecture (e.g. temples and palace G from Ebla); art of Ebla; Beidar tablets and seals. • 6. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Syria - The mid/ late third millennium – CONTINUATION - Urban civilization in Syrian Jezireh - Topics: SU.BIR; Nagar city-state; Kranzhügel; sacral and secular architecture (e.g. temples from Tell Beidar, Tell Chuera, Tell Mozan, Tell Brak; palace in Tell Chuera, Tell Beidar); art (e.g. Tell Chuera relief, metal objects); Beidar tablets and seals. • 7. Levant in the III Millennium B.C. - Sedentary agrarian society of EB I in southern Syria, Lebanon and Palestine region - Emergence of local urban culture in EB II-III - Collapse of the urban EB III culture - Topics: nomenclature of transitional period of III/ II millennium, relations with Egypt; Byblos – gateway for Egyptian influence; burial customs (e.g. Bab edh-Dhra’); town planning; urban architecture; temples and sacred stones; Khirbet Kerak pottery problem. • 8. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Mesopotamia: Akkadian and Ur III Periods - The first Mesopotamian empire under rules of the Akkadian Dynasty - The III dynasty of Ur - Collapse of a city state and a problem of interregional crisis; Gutian “invasion” - Topics: Sumero-Akkadian civilisation; deification of rulers; Gutian „invasion”, ”royal correspondence” as a historic source; sacral and secular architecture (e.g. temenos in Ur, temple of Inanna in Nippur, Shu-Sin’s “temple” from Eshnunna); art (e.g. “Sargons’s” head, Naramsin’s stela and rock reliefs, statuary art; seals – repertoire of scenes; • 9. Cities, states and cultures of the III Millennium BC. in Syria – Akkadian and Post-Akkadian periods - Akkadian imperialism and the crisis at the end of the III millennium - Topics: Hurrian occurrence in Urkesh/ Tell Mozan; Mesopotamian influence in Syria during Akkadian Period; Post-Akkadian- transitional or final period; crisis theories, architecture and finds (e.g. architectural complex from Tell Brak, palace in Tell Mozan)
Literature
  • Levy Th. E., The archaeology of the society in the Holy Land, London New York, 1998.
  • Moorey P.R.S., Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries: The Archaeological Evidence, Oxford 1994
  • Heinrich E., Die Tempel und Heiligtümer im Alten Mesopotamien, Berlin 1982
  • Akkermans P.M.M.G. & Schwarz G.M., The Archaeology of Syria. From Complex Hunter-Gatherers to Early Urban Societies ( ca. 16.000 – 300 BC), Cambridge 2003.
  • Kuhrt A., The Ancient Near East c. 3000 – 330 BC, London-New York 1995.
  • Cotterell A., The Penguin Encyclopaedia of Ancient Civilisations, New York 1980
  • Crawford H., Sumer and Sumerians, Cambridge 2004
  • Heinrich E., Die Paläste im Alten Mesopotamien, Berlin 1984
  • Orthmann W., Der Alte Orient, Berlin 1975.
  • Walker, Cuneiform. Reading the Past., University of California Press 1987
  • Roaf M., Cultural Atlas of Mesopotamia and the Ancient Near East, Oxford, 2000
  • Sasson J. M., Civilisations of the Ancient Near East, 4 vols., London 1995
  • MAZAR, Amihai. Archaeology of the land of the Bible, 10,000-586 B.C.E.. Online. 1st pbk. ed. New York: Doubleday, 1992. xxx, 576. ISBN 0385425902. [citováno 2024-04-24] info
  • KLENGEL, Horst. Geschichte und Kultur Altsyriens. Online. Leipzig: Koehler & Amelang, 1965. 226 s. [citováno 2024-04-24] info
Teaching methods
lectures
Assessment methods
written test
Language of instruction
English
Further Comments
The course is taught once in two years.
The course is taught: in blocks.
The course is also listed under the following terms Autumn 2012, Autumn 2014.
  • Enrolment Statistics (Spring 2020, recent)
  • Permalink: https://is.muni.cz/course/phil/spring2020/PAPVA_50