Ancient Knowledge Networks
A Social Geography of Cuneiform Scholarship in First-Millennium Assyria and Babylonia
Eleanor Robson
Addressing the relationships between political power, family ties, religious commitments and literate scholarship in the ancient Middle East of the first millennium BC, Eleanor Robson focuses on two regions where cuneiform script was the predominant writing medium: Assyria in the north of modern-day Syria and Iraq, and Babylonia to the south of modern-day Baghdad. She investigates how networks of knowledge enabled cuneiform intellectual culture to endure and adapt over the course of five world empires until its eventual demise in the mid-first century BC. In doing so, she also studies Assyriological and historical method, both now and over the past two centuries, asking how the field has shaped and been shaped by the academic concerns and fashions of the day. Above all, Ancient Knowledge Networks is an experiment in writing about ‘Mesopotamian science’, as it has often been known, using geographical and social approaches to bring new insights into the intellectual history of the world’s first empires.
Praise for Ancient Knowledge Networks
'This is an engaging volume that takes an original approach to understanding the agents of knowledge networks and the social, geographical and cultural factors that shaped them.'
Antiquity
'The second chapter ...is a useful chapter for students and scholars of the Ancient Near East ... Arguments are based on excellent studies of archives and salient observations about ancient communities elucidated from scanty but revealing evidence. Where the book innovates, however, is in tying all of these scholars and knowledge together.'
Journal of Near Eastern Studies
'The book complicates and humanises the categories that have streamlined the study of cuneiform scholarship. In its own words, this is a book about ‘how knowledge travels’ through the people who carry it, their writings, their responsibilities and their benefactors – human and divine. It animates the lives of scholars through their movements, their works and the movements of their works, until the end of cuneiform culture in Babylon and Uruk. Ancient Knowledge Networks is a study of the history of knowledge that restores context to text – an invaluable re-evaluation of the sources to the modern scholars of Assyria and Babylonia.'
History Today
'Eleanor Robson’s Ancient Knowledge Networks offers a fascinating portrait of the social and geographical life of cuneiform scholarship, scribal learning, or ṭupšarrūtu. It examines high cuneiform culture in the terms of the texts' own taxonomies of knowledge, while taking full account of relevant archaeological evidence and employing micro- and macro-geographical analysis. A lucid presentation of new ideas concerning the Assyrian and Babylonian first-millennium intelligentsia and their patrons, Ancient Knowledge Networks is a book for cuneiformists as well as non-specialist readers outside the ancient Middle Eastern fields.'
Francesca Rochberg, University of California, Berkeley
Eleanor Robson is Professor of Ancient Middle Eastern History at UCL. She is equally interested in the social and political history of the cuneiform cultures of ancient Iraq, 5000–2000 years ago and the construction of knowledge about ancient Iraq in over the past two centuries. Her Mathematics in Ancient Iraq: A Social History(2008) won the History of Science Society’s Pfizer Prize in 2011. With UK and Iraqi colleagues she runs the AHRC/GCRF-funded Nahrein Network (2017–21), which fosters the sustainable development of history, heritage and the humanities in Iraq and its neighbours.
1. Introduction
2. From ‘Ashurbanipal’s Library’ and ‘the stream of tradition’ to new approaches to cuneiform scholarship
3. Trust in Nabu? Assyrian royal attitudes to court scholarship
4. The writing-board was at my house: scholarly and textual mobility in seventh-century Assyria
5. Grasping the righteous sceptre: Nabu, scholarship, and the kings of Babylonia
6. At the gate of Eanna: Babylonian scholarly spaces before and after the early fifth century
7. Conclusions: Towards a social geography of cuneiform scholarship
Bibliography
Index
Antiquity
'The second chapter ...is a useful chapter for students and scholars of the Ancient Near East ... Arguments are based on excellent studies of archives and salient observations about ancient communities elucidated from scanty but revealing evidence. Where the book innovates, however, is in tying all of these scholars and knowledge together.'
Journal of Near Eastern Studies
'The book complicates and humanises the
categories that have streamlined the study of cuneiform scholarship. In its own
words, this is a book about ‘how knowledge travels’ through the people who
carry it, their writings, their responsibilities and their benefactors – human
and divine. It animates the lives of scholars through their movements, their
works and the movements of their works, until the end of cuneiform culture in
Babylon and Uruk. Ancient Knowledge Networks is a study of the history
of knowledge that restores context to text – an invaluable re-evaluation of the
sources to the modern scholars of Assyria and Babylonia.'
History Today
'Eleanor Robson’s Ancient Knowledge Networks offers a fascinating portrait of the social and geographical life of cuneiform scholarship, scribal learning, or ṭupšarrūtu. It examines high cuneiform culture in the terms of the texts' own taxonomies of knowledge, while taking full account of relevant archaeological evidence and employing micro- and macro-geographical analysis. A lucid presentation of new ideas concerning the Assyrian and Babylonian first-millennium intelligentsia and their patrons, Ancient Knowledge Networks is a book for cuneiformists as well as non-specialist readers outside the ancient Middle Eastern fields.' - Francesca Rochberg, University of California, Berkeley
Format: Open Access PDF
colour illustrations
Copyright: © 2019
ISBN: 9781787355941
Publication: November 14, 2019
Related products
Ageing with Smartphones in Ireland
There are not many books about how people get younger. It doesn’t happen very...Ageing with Smartphones in Uganda
Ageing with Smartphones in Uganda is based on a 16-month ethnography about ex...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban Brazil
With people living longer all over the world, ageing has been framed as a soc...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban Chile
What does it mean to be ageing in Chile as a migrant? What does it mean to be...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban China
If we want to understand contemporary China, the key is through understanding...Ageing with Smartphones in Urban Italy
‘Who am I at this (st)age? Where am I and where should I be, and how and wher...