ECU Libraries Catalog

Assyria : the rise and fall of the world's first empire / Eckart Frahm.

Author/creator Frahm, Eckart author.
Format Book and Print
EditionFirst edition.
Publication Info New York : Basic Books, 2023.
Copyright Notice ©2023
Descriptionxvii, 509 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cm
Subject(s)
Portion of title Rise and fall of the world's first empire
Contents Introduction -- The long road to glory. A small town on the Tigris -- Birth of a kingdom -- Disruption and recovery -- The crown in crisis -- Empire. The great expansion -- On the edges of empire -- A ghost story -- At the gates of Jerusalem -- Sennacherib's Babylonian problem -- Mother knows best -- 671 BCE -- Scholar, sadist, hunter, king -- Everyday life in the empire -- Imperial twilight -- Afterlife. Assyria's legacy on the ground -- A model empire -- Distorted reflections -- The second destruction -- Epilogue.
Abstract "In Assyria, historian Eckart Frahm tells the epic story of one of the ancient world's most accomplished civilizations, the Assyrian Empire. Tracing its origins to a minor city state in present-day Iraq, Assyria at its height, around 660 BCE, stretched from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf, the first empire the world had seen. Breath-taking, belligerent conquest -- epitomized in the motto of the seventh-century king Esarhaddon, "Before me, cities; behind me, ruins" -- fuelled much of Assyria's growth. But as their power increased, the Assyrians accomplished stunning achievements off the battlefield, too, commissioning the world's first universal library, creating monumental sculpture, and building an elaborate "Royal Road" throughout the empire that allowed the Assyrian metropole, Ashur, to stay in regular contact with its provinces. For three centuries, Assyria reigned preeminent before it suddenly collapsed in 609 BCE, destroyed by the combined armies of the Babylonians and the Medes. Drawing on deep research into Assyrian archaeology, art, and literature, Frahm reveals the enduring influence of Assyria in world history. The empire established a long tradition of war-prone, multi-ethnic conqueror-states, organized into separate provinces and geared towards moving resources on a massive scale from the periphery to the political center. The government of Assyria served, first directly and then indirectly, as a model for future Eurasian empires, from the Babylonian and Persian Empires of antiquity to the Abbasid and Ottoman caliphates of the Islamic period. And its impact extended far beyond politics. For instance, one of the main roots of Israelite monotheism -- from which Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all emerged -- was the traumatic encounter of the Israelites and Judeans with the autocratic rulers of Assyria. While Assyria ultimately fell rapidly within the span of only a decade, the empire left behind a centuries-long legacy that transformed global civilization. An utterly definitive history, this is the breathtaking story of Assyria, told as never before. It will completely reshape our understanding of the ancient world"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Genre/formHistory.
LCCN 2022035344
ISBN9781541674400 hardcover
ISBN1541674405 hardcover
ISBNelectronic book

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner General Stacks DS71 .F73 2023 ✔ Available Place Hold