A Biblical Interpretation Of World History, Chapter 3, Part 3 Chapter 3 Early Civilization, a Short History of the middle east from 3000 to 1000 B.C. SHORT HISTORY OF THE middle east FROM 3000 TO 1000 political standpoint, under their rule ancient Egypt began to die the nearest part of Anatoliawas called "Hatti" by Egypt http://www.xenohistorian.faithweb.com/worldhis/Hist03c.html
Extractions: Part I Part II Part III In the reign of Ramses XI a junior army officer named Herihor became high priest of Amen at Karnak. Not long after that he also got the jobs of viceroy of Nubia and commander-in-chief of the army. That made him the most powerful man in Egypt, and apparently he had little trouble deposing the last impotent king of the XX dynasty so he could rule instead. In the north one Smendes (also called Nesunebded) assumed power in place of the Ramessids, starting a dynasty of commerce-minded rulers (the XXI dynasty). The result was that Egypt now had two rulers: the XXI dynasty in Tanis (a city in the northeastern corner of the delta), and Herihor's family of priest-kings in Thebes. In the past that marked the beginning of anarchy, but the two families maintained peace with some successful diplomacy, including at least one marriage, between themselves.
The Hurrians spread over larger parts of southeast anatolia and northern Before the middle of the 2nd millennium BC, an Some names and words in ancient Near Eastern texts http://ragz-international.com/hurrians.htm
Extractions: The Hurrians The Rise of the Hurrians Robert Antonio Date: 2001 The Hurrians enter the orbit of ancient Middle Eastern civilization toward the end of the 3rd millennium BC. They arrived in Mesopotamia from the north or the east, but it is not known how long they had lived in the peripheral regions. There is a brief inscription in Hurrian language from the end of the period of Akkad, while that of King Arishen (or Atalshen) of Urkish and Nawar is written in Akkadian. The language of the Hurrians must have belonged to a widespread group of ancient Middle Eastern languages. The relationship between Hurrian and Subarean has already been mentioned, and the language of the Urartians, who played an important role from the end of the 2nd millennium to the 8th century BC, is likewise closely related to Hurrian. According to the Soviet scholars Igor M. Diakonov and Sergei A. Starostin, the Eastern Caucasian languages are an offshoot of the Hurrian-Urartian group. The high point of the Hurrian period was not reached until about the middle of the 2nd millennium. In the 15th century, Alalakh was heavily Hurrianized; and in the empire of Mitanni the Hurrians represented the leading and perhaps the most numerous population group. Yet the Hurrian heartland during this period was northern Mesopotamia, the country then known as Hurri, where the political units were dominated by dynasts of Indo-Iranian origin. In the 15th century BC the Hurrian area ranging from the Iranian mountains to Syria was united into a state called Mitanni. In the middle of the 14th century, the resurgent Hittite Empire under Suppiluliumas I defeated Mitanni and reduced its king, Mattiwaza, to vassalage, while Assyria seized the opportunity to reassert its independence.
Ancient Indus Tour 2: R H Meadow Bibliography southeastern Turkey, in Equids in the ancient World (RH Hitomi Hongo) Faunal analysis with a focus on anatolia. Tokyo middle Eastern Culture Center in Japan. http://www.harappa.com/indus2/meadbiblio.html
Extractions: Theses Survey 1967 the 1967 Harvard University Expedition to Southeastern Iran and a General Consideration of Iranian Prehistory . B.A. Honors Thesis, Harvard College, 140 pp. Cambridge, MA: Tozzer Library, Peabody Museum, Harvard University. . Cambridge, MA: Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, 990 pp. plus plates (also: Ann Arbor, Miss: University Microfilms International No. 8704479). PUBLICATIONS South Asian and Middle Eastern Archaeology: Studies and Syntheses Harappa: edited volume 1991. (edited and Preface) Harappa Excavations A Multidisciplinary Approach to Third Millennium Urbanism . Madison, WI: Prehistory Press. Harappa: research papers Pakistan Archaeology 1994. (with J.M. Kenoyer) Harappa excavations 1993: the city wall and inscribed materials, South Asian Archaeology 1996. (with J.M. Kenoyer): New inscribed objects from Harappa. Lahore Museum Bulletin South Asian Archaeology 1995 (R. and B. Allchin, Eds.). New Delhi: Oxford and IBH. In press. (with J.M. Kenoyer): "The "tiny steatite seals" (incised steatite tablets) of Harappa: some observations on their context and dating." In South Asian Archaeology 1997 (M. Taddei, Ed.). Rome: IsIAO.
Ancient's Bookshelf Wise and Angus McBride 1981 Osprey Publishing Ltd A short history of middle Eastern military ancient Turkey A Traveller s History of anatolia by Seton http://members.aol.com/Nedwich/oldbooks.html
Extractions: De Bellis Multitudinis by Phil Barker and Richard Bodley Scott ver. 2.0 Octrober 1997 published by WRG (The Wargames Research Group) The set of rules this site is dedicated to. It uses miniature figures on bases to represent groups of soldiers equiped into classes such as "Knights," "Blades," "Bows," etc. Players represent Generals maneuvering "commands" composed of varying numbers of bases into combats resolved with six sided dice. The object of the game is to try to match up your troops rock-paper-scissors style against your opponent. The player who does this best and with a bit of luck from the dice will usually win. Troops are valued based on lethality and training, and competition matches usually pit two armies (historical or ahistorical), against each other, both using an equal number of "points." The latest version of the rules improved the way opponents selected terrain for their tabletop and clarified some confusions regarding some of the combat results. D.B.M. Army Lists (Book 1: 3000BC to 500BC)
Alibris: To 622 people who established a kingdom in anatolia (modern Turkey of the greatest achievements of the ancient civilizations of the Near and middle Eastfrom the http://www.alibris.com/search/books/subject/To 622
Extractions: The Hittites were an Indo-European-speaking people who established a kingdom in Anatolia (modern Turkey) almost 4,000 years ago. They rose to become one of the great powers of the ancient Middle Eastern world by conquering Babylon - and were destroyed in the wake of the movements of the enigmatic Sea Peoples around 1180 BC. Macqueen's study...
Chronology Of Boys' Clothing : Ancient Civilizations -- Persia crushing a Ionian Greek revolt in anatolia (499493 addressed within the wider context of middle Eastern history The ancient Persians saw the world as a cosmic http://histclo.hispeed.com/chron/ancient/ac-per.html
Extractions: Figure 1.. Persia is not one of the early cradles of civilization and Persian civilization did not develop in river valley. Persian civilization developed east of the Fertile Crescent on the Iranian plateau of central Asia. The Iranian plateau was not settled until about 1500 BC by Aryan tribes, especially the Medes. The name Persian comes from the Parsua, another Aryan tribe. Alexander defeated Darius III in battles 334-331 BC, destroying the Persian Empire. Alexander hoped to unite the Greeks and Persians into one great empire. He incorporated Persian soldietrs into his army. He demanded that his important officers, all Macedonians, take Persian wives. His early death undid these ambitious plans (323 BC). Following a civil war among his generals, Seleucus Nicator, gained control over much of Alexander's Empire, except for Greece itself and Egypt. Seleucus conquured Babylon (312 BC). He annexed it to Persia, lands as farv east as the Indus River, Syria and Analtolia. At the same time Potolomy gained control of Egypt. Unlike Alexander's plans, Seleucus ruled Persia as a conquered land through Greek troops and satraps. Persia for nearly 5 centuries was ruled as a province of the Selecuid Empire. The Parthians overthrew the Greeks, who were unable to generate Persian support, about 250 B.C. The Parthians came from the deserts of central Asia. Unlike the Greeks, they were impressed with Persian civilization and ruled Persian through native kings. The Parthian empire lasted more than four centuries and during that period there was no important Persian revolt. The Parthians were one of the few people who successfully resisted the Roman Empire, desimating a Roman army led by Anthony. This played a major role in the defeat of Anthony and Cldeopatra by Octavian. Gradually Christianity spread to Persia and the power of the Parthians wained.
[ Middle Eastern A R C H I T E C T U R E ] Pyramid at Giza, built during the middle of the and David, the first two kings of ancient Israel, in forced the Byzantines out of eastern anatolia, the Fertile http://mideast.diaryland.com/background.html
Extractions: Background of the Middle East Middle East, geographic and cultural region located in southwestern Asia and northeastern Africa, originally referred to the Asian region south of the Black Sea between the Mediterranean Sea to the west and India to the east. In modern scholarship, and for the purposes of this article, the term refers collectively to the Asian countries of Bahrain, Cyprus, Iran, Iraq, Israel (and the Israeli-occupied Gaza Strip and West Bank), Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen, and the African country of Egypt. A broader, more cultural definition might include the Muslim countries of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Sudan, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. The first civilizations of the Middle East, which grew in the valleys of the Nile, Tigris, and Euphrates rivers, are among the oldest in the world. Alphabets, law codes, and cities, as did the worlds three great monotheistic religions, Judaism (13th century BC), Christianity (1st century to 4th century AD) and Islam (7th century AD) all began in the Middle East. Of the three, Islam continues to mark the region most profoundly. More than 90 percent of the people of the Middle East are Muslims. History Civilization as we know it began in the Middle East. The cultivation of cereals, first undertaken in the Middle East around 8000 BC, led to the creation of the first settled communities with permanent dwellings. Large archaeological mounds called tells contain the remains of some of these communities. Tells have been found in present-day Turkey and throughout the Fertile Crescent, an ancient agricultural region containing parts of present-day Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan. Jericho in the present-day West Bank and Çatal Hüyük in present-day Turkey are two of the best known of these sites.
CMES: Spring 2001 Courses Revisited . 102B, Archaeology of ancient Egypt The, 4, Professor Carol, 100%. middle and New Kingdoms, Redmount. Archaeology and Art of ancient. anatolia, Part 2. http://ias.berkeley.edu/cmes/courses_files/spr2001_courses.html
Powell's Books - Used, New, And Out Of Print of two contrasting towns in anatolia, based on and political turmoil in the middle east throughout the http://www.powells.com/subsection/WorldHistoryMiddleEast.51.html
History Of Civilization - Study Guide - The Ancient World History of Civilization Study Guide, Unit 1 The ancient World. Questions? 1991 - 1786 BCE, middle Kingdom (XII). anatolia. 1600 - 1500 BCE, Old Hittite Kingdom. http://www2.uta.edu/stillwell/notes-file/WCstudy1.html
Bronze Age Mackfucken-daddy ancient civ Notes. In the Upper Paleolithic era, Homo sapiens sapiens began to slowly improve its lifestyle in terms of diet, clothing, and tools, but remained nomadic. in the http://www.angelfire.com/mac/elana/bronze.html
LII - Results For "mesopotamia" About Subscribe Help Suggest a Site Comments More Search Tools. Advanced Search. Results for mesopotamia. 1 to 10 of 10. Top 20 subjects. Art of the First Cities The Third Millennium http://lii.org/search?m=p&query=mesopotamia&searchtype=keywords