When the Persians conquered Lydia in the mid-sixth century B.C., they had to incorporate this large and wealthy province into the empire so that it might function as an integral part of the larger whole. Such a transition affected culture as well as commerce, people as well as politics. How was the superposition of a new administrative hierarchy on the already-existing sociopolitical structure effected, and how did it affect the lives of the people involved? How did the new elite composed of Persians, local personages, and perhaps people from other regions of the empire co-exist and help to establish an ideology of empire in this important province? How were local social structures affected by political and social transformations? This diss...
The aim of this study is to determine and define the Persian Achaemenid style produced in the North-...
The present thesis aims to analyse the manner in which the ethnically and culturally diverse environ...
For almost 500 years (247 BCE–224 CE), the Arsacid kings of Parthia ruled over a vast multicultural ...
When the Persians conquered Lydia in the mid-sixth century B.C., they had to incorporate this large ...
The mid-sixth century BC saw the formation of one of the ancient world’s largest and richest empires...
Even though the Persian period has attracted a fair share of scholarly interest in recent years, as ...
This dissertation is a multi-scalar archaeological inquiry into the re-making of social order in a s...
Achaemenid Persian art is an area of ancient Near Eastern art that has received little art historica...
The dissertation analyses the reliefs and paintings on thirty-one different tombs in Western Anatoli...
The fame of Sardis is tied to its history as a royal city, beginning in the 7th century BC and conti...
This thesis examines the art of Babylonia, Iran and Bactria after the Macedonian conquest, from c.33...
The Achaemenid Empire (550 to 330 BCE) emerged out of the strong imperial leadership of Cyrus the Gr...
This dissertation investigates the imperial relationship between the heartland and provinces of the ...
This dissertation explores the extent to which Persian policies in the western satrapies originated ...
The Persians ruled in whole of Anatolia since 546 B.C. Their hegemony came to an end in 334 B.C. whe...
The aim of this study is to determine and define the Persian Achaemenid style produced in the North-...
The present thesis aims to analyse the manner in which the ethnically and culturally diverse environ...
For almost 500 years (247 BCE–224 CE), the Arsacid kings of Parthia ruled over a vast multicultural ...
When the Persians conquered Lydia in the mid-sixth century B.C., they had to incorporate this large ...
The mid-sixth century BC saw the formation of one of the ancient world’s largest and richest empires...
Even though the Persian period has attracted a fair share of scholarly interest in recent years, as ...
This dissertation is a multi-scalar archaeological inquiry into the re-making of social order in a s...
Achaemenid Persian art is an area of ancient Near Eastern art that has received little art historica...
The dissertation analyses the reliefs and paintings on thirty-one different tombs in Western Anatoli...
The fame of Sardis is tied to its history as a royal city, beginning in the 7th century BC and conti...
This thesis examines the art of Babylonia, Iran and Bactria after the Macedonian conquest, from c.33...
The Achaemenid Empire (550 to 330 BCE) emerged out of the strong imperial leadership of Cyrus the Gr...
This dissertation investigates the imperial relationship between the heartland and provinces of the ...
This dissertation explores the extent to which Persian policies in the western satrapies originated ...
The Persians ruled in whole of Anatolia since 546 B.C. Their hegemony came to an end in 334 B.C. whe...
The aim of this study is to determine and define the Persian Achaemenid style produced in the North-...
The present thesis aims to analyse the manner in which the ethnically and culturally diverse environ...
For almost 500 years (247 BCE–224 CE), the Arsacid kings of Parthia ruled over a vast multicultural ...