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Ancient Near East #1

The Ancient Near East c. 3000-330 BC, Vol. 1

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this is authoritative study. amelie kuhrt examines its history from the earliest written documents to the conquest of alexander the great. c 3000-33- bc.

410 pages, Paperback

Published May 8, 1997

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About the author

Amélie Kuhrt

28 books11 followers
Born 1944, she is a historian specialist in the history of the ancient Near East.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
377 reviews32 followers
May 20, 2023
This very good history shows also just how much we don't know and some things we will never know. It is well written and I like the breakdown of chapters and sections within the chapters. It all flows nicely. This book marks the beginning of reading project in which I will read a total of 9 books on Ancient Near Eastern history.
Profile Image for Craine.
101 reviews7 followers
April 7, 2024
Yikes, this took me ages to read where the last 50 pages or so I must have postponed half a year at least. It might then make you wonder why I would still give this a favorable review? Well, I do find the historical information and the dense descriptions very valuable for those serious about the history of the ancient near east. To say that the book is filled with references would be an understatement as nearly every page is packed to the brim with careful references backing up historical claims.
I would however warn the enthusiastic reader that the writing style comes across as a bit dull and overly academic for many of the passages found in the book. More so, Kuhrt will give opinions of other experts in the field on many occasions, but will not give her own opinion as to how much merit she finds in the outside opinions given. I understand she wants to provide the most objective account of the history, but it would have been nice to evaluate the statements of others through personal reflections at times, if for anything to give an account about the diversity of views of experts as well as breaking the otherwise rather dry account of details in the book.

In closing, a book I recommend for those particularly interested in the details pertaining to this time period as well as the many archaeological descriptions which gives the historical reconstruction an empirical backing. For me personally, I should have started on an easier entry book such as " The History of The Ancient World" by Susan Bauer where as this book is not nearly as meticulously crafted, the reading style is a lot simpler as well as being a good, general entry point into ancient history.

Note: I don't like the star rating and as such I only rate books based upon one star or five stars corresponding to the in my opinion preferable rating system of thumbs up/down. This later rating system increases in my humble opinion the degree to which the reader is likely to engage with a review instead of merely glancing at the number of stars of a given book.)
20 reviews
November 4, 2024
Excellent survey of the Bronze Age Near East. Appreciated how the level of detail kept things moving while still having time to give thorough coverage of the political, cultural, and archaeological aspects of each nation and period. Looking forward to Vol 2!

Only two criticisms:
1. There aren't nearly enough maps, and those that are there are subpar.
2. Would have loved if the book could have covered Greece and the Aegean as well, but understand it had to draw the line somewhere.
Profile Image for Shane Hill.
374 reviews20 followers
September 29, 2019
A decent read with some excellent info on these very early civilizations but the writing was a little dry and turgid at times!
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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