Tribe and State: The Dynamics of International Politics and the Reign of Zimri-lim (Gorgias Studies in the Ancient Near East)
معرفی کتاب «Tribe and State: The Dynamics of International Politics and the Reign of Zimri-lim (Gorgias Studies in the Ancient Near East)» نوشتهٔ Adam E. Miglio، منتشرشده توسط نشر Gorgias Press در سال 2014. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
The cuneiform tablets recovered from the ancient city of Mari (Tell Hariri) richly document the socio-political world of ancient Syro-Mesopotamia. The city of Mari flourished as a political capital under the king Zimri-Lim from c. 1775-1762 until Hammu-rabi of Babylon destroyed the city, leaving thousands of cuneiform letters in the ruins. The letters from ancient Mari reveal how society constrained and catalyzed politics during the reign of Zimri-Lim, the last king of Mari. This book analyzes Zimri-Lim s interactions with contemporary sovereigns from the Habur as well as his dealings with Yamut-bal and Numha tribal polities. It describes how Zimri-Lim s disproportionate dependence on tribal connections left him vulnerable when tribal alliances began to fail him in his tenth regnal year. At this time, an Elamite force mounted a sustained offensive against several of the states in southern Mesopotamia and the northern regions of the Habur. The Elamite incursion into the Habur undercut the tribal alliances of Zimri-Lim, making him susceptible to the ambitious expansion of Hammu-rabi of Babylon. TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES, MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS NOTE ON DATES AND THE CITATION OF TEXTS AND EDITIONS SYMBOLS USED IN TRANSCRIPTIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ANCIENT POLITICS: APPROACHING HISTORY AT MARI POLITICS, THE STATE, AND SOCIETY A DYNAMIC SOCIO-POLITICAL LANDSCAPE: “MARI AND THE LAND OF THE MOBILE PASTORALISTS " ZIMRI-LIM’S CONDUCT OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS THE BEGINNING OF THE END: ZIMRILIM’S WAR WITH ELAM CONCLUSION BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
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This book analyzes Zimri-Lim's interactions with sovereigns from the Habur and with Yamut-bal and Numha tribal polities. It describes how Zimri-Lim's disproportionate dependence on tribal connections left him vulnerable when these alliances began to falter in his tenth regnal year.