From Memphis to Babylon

Intro Acknowledgements Table of contents List of illustrations Abbreviations 1. Introduction 1.1 Aims and questions 1.2 Previous research 1.3 Material and method 1.4 Theory 1.5 Historical background 2. The evidence: the individual level and the biographic perspective 2.1 Identified Africans 2.1.1 Pe...

Full description

Saved in:

Main Author: Karlsson , Mattias

Format: Book

Language: en_US

Published: Zaphon 2025

Subjects:

Online Access: Login to view Source

Tags: Add Tag

No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!

Call Number:

id oai:library.arce.org:123456789-480
record_format dspace
institution My University
collection DSpace
language en_US
topic Africans Iraq Babylonia Antiquities
Assyrians Iraq Babylonia Antiquities
Middle East
HISTORY
spellingShingle Africans Iraq Babylonia Antiquities
Assyrians Iraq Babylonia Antiquities
Middle East
HISTORY
Karlsson , Mattias
From Memphis to Babylon
description Intro Acknowledgements Table of contents List of illustrations Abbreviations 1. Introduction 1.1 Aims and questions 1.2 Previous research 1.3 Material and method 1.4 Theory 1.5 Historical background 2. The evidence: the individual level and the biographic perspective 2.1 Identified Africans 2.1.1 People with certain or likely African names 2.1.2 People identified as Africans via ethnonyms 2.1.3 People identified as Africans via family relations 2.2 Possible Africans 2.2.1 People with possibly African names 2.2.2 People with hybrid or adopted African names 2.3 Anonymous Africans 2.3.1 Anonymous Africans in Neo- and Late-Babylonian royal inscriptions and chronicles 2.3.2 Anonymous Africans in Neo- and Late-Babylonian documents 3. The evidence: the collective level and the demographic perspective 3.1 Demographics and the African group: identities and properties 3.1.1 The ethnic composition of the African group 3.1.2 The sex/gender composition of the African group 3.1.3 The age composition of the African group 3.1.4 The class composition of the African group 3.2 Demographics and the African group: settings and circumstances 3.2.1 The temporal distribution of the African group 3.2.2 The spatial distribution of the African group 3.2.3 The backgrounds to the presence of the African group 4. Conclusion 4.1 Africans in Chaldean and Achaemenid Babylonia: integration and assimilation 4.2 Adaptation and co-optation: Babylonian officials of African descent 5. Bibliography 6. Illustrations 7. Appendices and indices 7.1 Appendices 7.1.1 Identified Africans 7.1.2 Possible Africans 7.1.3 Anonymous Africans 7.2 Indices 7.2.1 Deities 7.2.2 People 7.2.3 Places 7.2.4 Texts 7.2.5 Egyptian words
format Book
author Karlsson , Mattias
author_facet Karlsson , Mattias
author_sort Karlsson , Mattias
title From Memphis to Babylon
title_short From Memphis to Babylon
title_full From Memphis to Babylon
title_fullStr From Memphis to Babylon
title_full_unstemmed From Memphis to Babylon
title_sort from memphis to babylon
publisher Zaphon
publishDate 2025
url https://library.arce.org:82/handle/123456789/480
_version_ 1833875451809890304
spelling oai:library.arce.org:123456789-4802025-06-02T06:21:22Z From Memphis to Babylon Karlsson , Mattias Africans Iraq Babylonia Antiquities Assyrians Iraq Babylonia Antiquities Middle East HISTORY Intro Acknowledgements Table of contents List of illustrations Abbreviations 1. Introduction 1.1 Aims and questions 1.2 Previous research 1.3 Material and method 1.4 Theory 1.5 Historical background 2. The evidence: the individual level and the biographic perspective 2.1 Identified Africans 2.1.1 People with certain or likely African names 2.1.2 People identified as Africans via ethnonyms 2.1.3 People identified as Africans via family relations 2.2 Possible Africans 2.2.1 People with possibly African names 2.2.2 People with hybrid or adopted African names 2.3 Anonymous Africans 2.3.1 Anonymous Africans in Neo- and Late-Babylonian royal inscriptions and chronicles 2.3.2 Anonymous Africans in Neo- and Late-Babylonian documents 3. The evidence: the collective level and the demographic perspective 3.1 Demographics and the African group: identities and properties 3.1.1 The ethnic composition of the African group 3.1.2 The sex/gender composition of the African group 3.1.3 The age composition of the African group 3.1.4 The class composition of the African group 3.2 Demographics and the African group: settings and circumstances 3.2.1 The temporal distribution of the African group 3.2.2 The spatial distribution of the African group 3.2.3 The backgrounds to the presence of the African group 4. Conclusion 4.1 Africans in Chaldean and Achaemenid Babylonia: integration and assimilation 4.2 Adaptation and co-optation: Babylonian officials of African descent 5. Bibliography 6. Illustrations 7. Appendices and indices 7.1 Appendices 7.1.1 Identified Africans 7.1.2 Possible Africans 7.1.3 Anonymous Africans 7.2 Indices 7.2.1 Deities 7.2.2 People 7.2.3 Places 7.2.4 Texts 7.2.5 Egyptian words The first civilizations in world history, Egypt and Mesopotamia, are often studied separately. This study takes another approach and focuses on relations between these two river-based cultures. This study deals with African-Babylonian interaction in 626-331 BCE, during which Babylonia (today's southern Iraq) first was the centre of a state that dominated the ancient Near East and then an important province in the Achaemenid empire. During these 300 years, clashes between Saite Egypt (664-525) and Chaldean Babylonia (626-539) as well as the Persian conquest of Egypt led to a transfer of power and people "from Memphis to Babylon". The overarching aim of this work is to discuss relations between Africa and Mesopotamia. The more precise aims of this study are to identify Africans (Egyptians, Kushites, Libyans) in Babylonian texts from the Chaldean (626-539) and Achaemenid (539-331) periods, and to discuss the presence of Africans in Chaldean and Achaemenid Babylonia from the viewpoints of individual-biographic and collective-demographic levels and perspectives. The following research questions (centred on five interrogative words) are posed. Who were these Africans (in terms of ethnicity, gender/sex, age, and class)? What did these people do (in terms of profession)? When did they live (in terms of reign or time period)? Where did they live (in terms of village, city, and region)? How were they incorporated into the Babylonian realm (in terms of forced/voluntary, first/second generation, etc.)? - The presence of the African officials in the service of Chaldean and Achaemenid Babylonia points to a complex process in which both adaptation and co-optating played part. The individual's wish or need to adapt in order to survive co-existed with an external pressure from the state level that aimed to make the African deportees into loyal and profitable subjects. The transfer from Memphis to Babylon must have entailed a continuous re-evaluation of what it meant to be a part of the Egyptian civilization by the rivers of Babylon. 2025-06-02T06:21:21Z 2024 Book Münster 9783963272639 https://library.arce.org:82/handle/123456789/480 en_US Ägypten und Altes Testament Series; 125 application/pdf Zaphon