This paper is a study of the topos of the king burning captives in the Assyrian royal inscriptions. This punishment is notable for both its rarity and its cruelty, being the only time that the royal inscriptions describe violence towards children. I approach this topic in terms of Donald Black’s model of social control, in which the form and severity of social control, including violence, varies in relation to the “social geometry” that separates the parties involved in a dispute or conflict. I argue that in the royal inscriptions burning is inflicted on those that the Assyrians saw as “uncivilized”: peoples inhabiting poorer cities in mountain regions who lacked the infrastructure necessary to stockpile prestige goods, such as precious met...
New Kingdom pharaohs were quick to display their dominance over foreign captives in a variety of con...
This paper deals with a topic hardly studied by our fellow scholars: the management of casualties du...
When Esarhaddon named his successors, he split the empire between two of his sons, with Assurbanipal...
This dissertation examines the representation of enemy punishment in prisms, reliefs, epigraphs, and...
This dissertation is a study of the literary motifs and topoi relating to rebellion in the Assyrian ...
Between the ninth and seventh centuries BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire became the largest the world ha...
The essays collected in this volume (two previously unpublished) examine ways in which the kings of ...
During its heyday in the eight and seventh centuries BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire was so militarily ...
During its heyday in the eight and seventh centuries BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire was so militarily ...
<p></p><p>Abstract The idea of a predominantly bellicose and cruel Assyrian Empire (Ninth - Seventh ...
In modern times, two forms of capital punishment practised in the Assyrian Empire have profoundly in...
This article is devoted to the study of the image of the Assyrian court and royal behaviour as prese...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 78-82.1. Introduction -- 2. The catagorisation of forced migr...
This examination of the events surrounding the rise and height of the Assyrian Empire compares diffe...
When Esarhaddon named his successors, he split the empire between two of his sons, with Assurbanipal...
New Kingdom pharaohs were quick to display their dominance over foreign captives in a variety of con...
This paper deals with a topic hardly studied by our fellow scholars: the management of casualties du...
When Esarhaddon named his successors, he split the empire between two of his sons, with Assurbanipal...
This dissertation examines the representation of enemy punishment in prisms, reliefs, epigraphs, and...
This dissertation is a study of the literary motifs and topoi relating to rebellion in the Assyrian ...
Between the ninth and seventh centuries BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire became the largest the world ha...
The essays collected in this volume (two previously unpublished) examine ways in which the kings of ...
During its heyday in the eight and seventh centuries BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire was so militarily ...
During its heyday in the eight and seventh centuries BCE, the Neo-Assyrian Empire was so militarily ...
<p></p><p>Abstract The idea of a predominantly bellicose and cruel Assyrian Empire (Ninth - Seventh ...
In modern times, two forms of capital punishment practised in the Assyrian Empire have profoundly in...
This article is devoted to the study of the image of the Assyrian court and royal behaviour as prese...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 78-82.1. Introduction -- 2. The catagorisation of forced migr...
This examination of the events surrounding the rise and height of the Assyrian Empire compares diffe...
When Esarhaddon named his successors, he split the empire between two of his sons, with Assurbanipal...
New Kingdom pharaohs were quick to display their dominance over foreign captives in a variety of con...
This paper deals with a topic hardly studied by our fellow scholars: the management of casualties du...
When Esarhaddon named his successors, he split the empire between two of his sons, with Assurbanipal...