Damqatum - Number 4 (2008) English


Book Description

Damqatum is a journal dedicated to the history and archaeology of the Near East, oriented to the general public.




Damqatum - Number 3 (2007) English


Book Description

Damqatum is a journal dedicated to the history and archaeology of the Near East, oriented to the general public.




Damqatum - Number 7 (2011) English


Book Description

Damqatum is a journal dedicated to the history and archaeology of the Near East, oriented to the general public.




Damqatum - Number 17 (2021)


Book Description

Damqatum is a journal dedicated to the history and archaeology of the Near East, oriented to the general public.




Damqatum - Number 19 (2023)


Book Description

Damqatum is a journal dedicated to the history and archaeology of the Near East, oriented to the general public.




Damqatum - Number 18 (2022)


Book Description

Damqatum is a journal dedicated to the history and archaeology of the Near East, oriented to the general public.




Iron Age Terracotta Figurines from the Southern Levant in Context


Book Description

This interdisciplinary volume is a ‘one-stop location’ for the most up-to-date scholarship on Southern Levantine figurines in the Iron Age. The essays address terracotta figurines attested in the Southern Levant from the Iron Age through the Persian Period (1200–333 BCE). The volume deals with the iconography, typology, and find context of female, male, animal, and furniture figurines and discusses their production, appearance, and provenance, including their identification and religious functions. While giving priority to figurines originating from Phoenicia, Philistia, Jordan, and Israel/Palestine, the volume explores the influences of Egyptian, Anatolian, Mesopotamian, and Mediterranean (particularly Cypriot) iconography on Levantine pictorial material.




Complete Babylonian


Book Description

Do you want to engage with Babylonian culture and literature in the original language?The course will introduce you to a fascinating world of gods and demons, heroes and kings.The readings are drawn from myths, letters, law-codes, medical incantations, and other authentic, ancient writings. The language is presented in the Roman alphabet, with an explanation of cuneiform script, and the main features of Assyrian - cognate with Babylonian - are also explained. Learn effortlessly with a new easy-to-read page design and interactive features in this book from Teach Yourself, the No. 1 brand in language learning.




Digital Papyrology I


Book Description

Since the very beginnings of the digital humanities, Papyrology has been in the vanguard of the application of information technologies to its own scientific purposes, for both theoretical and practical reasons (the strong awareness towards the problems of human memory and the material ways of preserving it; the need to work with a multifarious and overwhelming amount of different data). After more than thirty years of development, we have now at our disposal the most advanced tools to make papyrological studies more and more effective, and even to create a new conception of "papyrology" and a new model of "edition" of the ancient documents. At this turining point, it is important to build an epistemological framework including all the different expressions of Digital Papyrology, to trace a historical sketch setting the background of the contemporary tools, and to provide a clear overview of the current theoretical and technological trends, so that all the possibilities currently available can be exploited following uniform pathways. The volume represents an innovative attempt to deal with such topics, usually relegated into very quick and general treatments within journal articles or papyrological handbooks.




Like a Bird in a Cage


Book Description

What makes one crime more serious than another, and why? This book investigates the problem of "seriousness of offence" in English law from the comparative perspective of biblical law. Burnside takes a semiotic approach to show how biblical conceptions of seriousness are synthesised and communicated through various descriptive and performative registers. Seven case studies show that biblical law discriminates between the seriousness of different offences and between the relative seriousness of the same offence when committed by different people or when performed in different ways. Recurring elements include location and the offender's social statue. The closing chapter considers some of the implications for the current debate about crime and punishment.