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The Archaeology of the Cuneiform Inscriptions

This 1907 work describes the interactions among the different nations of the Near East and Asia Minor revealed by cuneiform tablets.

Archibald Henry Sayce (Author)

9781108082396, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 27 June 2019

258 pages, 16 b/w illus. 2 maps
21.5 x 14 x 1.5 cm, 0.3 kg

Archibald Henry Sayce (1845–1933) became interested in Middle Eastern languages and scripts while still a teenager. Old Persian and Akkadian cuneiform had recently been deciphered, and popular enthusiasm for these discoveries was running high when Sayce began his academic career at Oxford in 1869. In this 1907 work, based on lectures delivered in Edinburgh in the previous year, he considers the state of archaeological knowledge of Babylonia and Assyria, which he describes as 'miserably deficient', and in particular the paradox of a huge number of cuneiform tablets in various languages drawn from many sites at which the original excavation had not provided an adequate context. Beginning with the history of the decipherment of cuneiform, Sayce goes on to describe what the tablets reveal of political and trade interactions among the different nations of the Near East and Asia Minor, and the relevance of these discoveries to Old Testament studies.

Preface
1. The decipherment of the cuneiform inscriptions
2. The archaeological materials
3. The Sumerians
4. The relation of Babylonian to Egyptian civilization
5. Asia Minor
7. Canaan in the century before the exodus
Index.

Subject Areas: Archaeology by period / region [HDD]

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