With few surviving Greek sources from Hellenistic Babylonia, we are often ill-informed about the details of Seleucid imperialism ‘on the ground’ — in particular, about the Seleucids' relationship with the Babylonian priestly elites and Babylonian cult and culture. This makes the cuneiform sources all the more important. One of the most intriguing is the Antiochus (or Borsippa) Cylinder, a clay cylinder in the form of a traditional Mesopotamian royal inscription recording Antiochus I's restoration of a Babylonian temple. Although the Cylinder was previously seen as evidence for the adoption of Babylonian cultural forms by the Seleucids, recent readings have analysed it as a product of interaction between Babylonian tradition and Seleucid imp...
This article aims at identifying shared elements in the Cyrus cylinder, the Behistun inscription and...
The relationship between Seleukos and Babylon can be understood by analyzing the evidence related to...
The article explores whether key features of Babylonian textual standardisation may have may have in...
With few surviving Greek sources from Hellenistic Babylonia, we are often ill-informed about the det...
With few surviving Greek sources from Hellenistic Babylonia, we are often ill-informed about the det...
This paper argues that numismatic representations portraying living Seleukid kings as divine can be ...
Later classical sources often described Babylon, its palaces and its temples, which astonished [– or...
Ancient Seleucia-on-the-Tigris, located in modern Iraq, was a multiethnic imperial capital city in M...
The aim of this article is to discuss several groups of sources which are of special interest regard...
The Seleucids conquered and then controlled for c.200 years (312–64 bce) a territory that was remark...
International audienceBerossos of Babylon wrote a piece of work in Greek, dedicated to Antiochos I (...
In 323 BC, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great died in Babylon. In his life, he conquered t...
The aim of this article is to discuss several groups of sources which are of special interest regard...
A three-column clay cylinder on display at the Bible Lands Museum (Jerusalem) and inscribed with an ...
After Cyrus’ conquest of Babylon in 539 BC contacts between the Greek and the Babylonian worlds beca...
This article aims at identifying shared elements in the Cyrus cylinder, the Behistun inscription and...
The relationship between Seleukos and Babylon can be understood by analyzing the evidence related to...
The article explores whether key features of Babylonian textual standardisation may have may have in...
With few surviving Greek sources from Hellenistic Babylonia, we are often ill-informed about the det...
With few surviving Greek sources from Hellenistic Babylonia, we are often ill-informed about the det...
This paper argues that numismatic representations portraying living Seleukid kings as divine can be ...
Later classical sources often described Babylon, its palaces and its temples, which astonished [– or...
Ancient Seleucia-on-the-Tigris, located in modern Iraq, was a multiethnic imperial capital city in M...
The aim of this article is to discuss several groups of sources which are of special interest regard...
The Seleucids conquered and then controlled for c.200 years (312–64 bce) a territory that was remark...
International audienceBerossos of Babylon wrote a piece of work in Greek, dedicated to Antiochos I (...
In 323 BC, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great died in Babylon. In his life, he conquered t...
The aim of this article is to discuss several groups of sources which are of special interest regard...
A three-column clay cylinder on display at the Bible Lands Museum (Jerusalem) and inscribed with an ...
After Cyrus’ conquest of Babylon in 539 BC contacts between the Greek and the Babylonian worlds beca...
This article aims at identifying shared elements in the Cyrus cylinder, the Behistun inscription and...
The relationship between Seleukos and Babylon can be understood by analyzing the evidence related to...
The article explores whether key features of Babylonian textual standardisation may have may have in...