Assyrian Historiography: A Source Study

audiobook

Assyrian Historiography: A Source Study

by A. T. (Albert Ten Eyck) Olmstead

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

For anyone eager to understand how the ancient Assyrians recorded their own past, this study offers a clear roadmap through the fragmentary world of royal inscriptions and stone tablets. It begins by laying out the essential bibliography of surviving documents, then sorts them into distinct classes so listeners can grasp why some texts are far more trustworthy than others. By focusing on the sources that lie closest to the events they describe, the author shows how a reliable narrative of Assyrian reigns can be built.

The book also traces the evolution of Assyrian historiography from its Babylonian roots, where early records were chiefly commemorations of temple building rather than war chronicles. Readers learn how these architectural dedications gradually gave way to more detailed royal annals, and how scholars untangle the layers of tradition to separate myth from fact. Throughout, the discussion remains accessible, offering concrete examples that illuminate the methods historians use to reconstruct a civilization whose voice survives only in stone.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (134K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-09-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A. T. (Albert Ten Eyck) Olmstead

A. T. (Albert Ten Eyck) Olmstead

1880–1945

An American historian and Assyriologist, this early specialist in the ancient Near East helped bring Assyrian and Persian history to a wider audience through clear, influential scholarship. He spent much of his career at the University of Chicago, where he taught Oriental history and wrote major works on the ancient world.

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