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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

After the Achaemenids : exchange, transmission and transformation in the visual culture of Babylonia, Iran and Bactria c.330-c.100 BC

Wood, Rachel K. L. January 2012 (has links)
This thesis examines the art of Babylonia, Iran and Bactria after the Macedonian conquest, from c.330 to c.100 BC, in light of current developments in archaeological theory of cultural interaction. In order to illustrate the character and scale of these interactions, the thesis presents a discussion of iconographic material ranging from architectural ornament and sculpture to minor arts. Chapters II-IV discuss the material from each site, highlighting regional characteristics and differences between media. Chapters V-VII use three cross-sections to examine cultural interaction visible in material used for different social functions (‘spheres’). The ‘sphere of gods’ discusses religious architectural ornament and iconography, and the implications for our interpretation of cult in Babylonia, Iran and Bactria in this period. The ‘sphere of kings’ considers ruler representation and the physical appearance of ‘royal space’ while the ‘sphere of citizens and subjects’ discusses material made and used by the wider populace. Macedonian rule and the influx of settlers to Babylonia, Iran and Bactria developed networks of exchange, transmission and transformation creating ‘visually multi-lingual’ societies. The adoption of new artistic influences did not replace all existing traditions or necessarily infringe ethnic identities. There was selective adoption and adaptation of iconography, styles and forms to suit the new patrons and contexts. This cultural co-existence included some combinations of features from different artistic traditions into individual compositions, emphasising how visual languages were not closed-off, rigidly defined or static. Patrons were not confined to using the visual language associated with their ethnicity or current location. There was flexibility of use and meaning, which may present a useful model in the study of other areas of cultural interaction in the Hellenistic period.
22

Esclaves, dépendants, deportés : les frontières de l'esclavage en Babylonie au premier millénaire avant J.-C. / Slaves, dependants, deportees : the boundaries of slavery in first millennium BCE Babylonia

Dromard, Benjamin 10 November 2017 (has links)
Au sein de la société babylonienne (actuel Irak) de la seconde moitié du premier millénaire avant Jésus, plusieurs modes d'organisation du travail coexistent : travail rémunéré, esclavage, différentes formes de dépendance. Ma thèse se concentre sur le statut et activités des esclaves et dépendant(e)s rattaché(e)s aux temples, ainsi que celui des déportés d'origine judéenne et ouest-sémitique déplacés de force en Mésopotamie par l'empire néo-babylonien lors de la conquête de la Syrie-­Palestine. Ces trois groupes sociaux ont pu être analysés comme étant soumis à des formes d'esclavage. Je tente une étude précise de leurs activités économiques, leur implication dans différents secteurs (agriculture, commerce, artisanat, construction), que ce soit en milieu rural ou urbain, tout en confrontant cela avec la documentation juridique et judiciaire disponible. Ainsi, je tente de montrer les frontières théoriques des statuts des esclaves, dépendant(e)s et déporté(e)s, mais aussi comment la seule lecture juridique est insuffisante pour cela. Ma thèse s'intéresse ainsi particulièrement à distinguer les hiérarchies socio-économiques présentes dans chacun de ces groupes de travailleurs afin de percevoir les dynamiques sociales qui se jouent. La constitution d'une classe de travailleurs intermédiaires (esclaves-agents, dépendants gestionnaires, déportés disposant de capital à investir ...) est un fait important à analyser de ce fait. Quelles possibilités de mobilité sociale et d'émancipation en Babylonie au premier millénaire avant J.-C. pour les membres de ces groupes? C'est l'enjeu de mon étude, pleinement inscrite dans l'histoire du travail. / Several modes of production exist in first millennium BCE Babylonia (modem Iraq): wage-labour, slavery, different forms of dependency. My thesis is mainly focused on the study of the status and the activities of slaves and temple dependants, with the addition of Judean and West Semite deportees, forced by the neo-Babylonian to live and work in Mesopotamia after the conquest of Syria-Palestine. These three social groups have been analysed as different forms of slavery in the historiography. My aim is for a precise study of their economic activities, their part in several economic sectors (agriculture, trade, craftsmanship, building) in rural and urban context. I try to put this in contrast with the available legal documentation. Therefore, I try to show the theoretical boundaries of the statuses of slaves, dependants and deportees and how their legal analysis isn't sufficient. My dissertation aims for revealing the hierarchies present inside those three groups of labourers and the social dynamics at play. The making of a class of intermediary workers (slave agents, dependants having an administrative position, deportees investing capital ... ) is an important historical fact needing an analysis. Are there possibilities for social mobility and emancipation in their favour in first millennium BCE Babylonia? Answering this is one objective of my study, grounded in the perspective of an history of labour.
23

Neo-Babylonian business and administrative documents with transliteration, translation and notes,

Moore, Ellen Whitley, Contenau, G. January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Michigan, 1932. / Without thesis note. "Lithoprinted." "A transliteration and a translation of tablets belonging to the Louvre collection which have been copied and published by G. Conteneau in volumes XII and XIII of 'Textes cuneiformes' Musée du Louvre Department des antiquités orientales, under the title 'Contrats neo-babyloniens'"--Pref. "Abbreviations of works cited": p. xiv-xv.
24

Le caractère religieux de la royauté assyro-babylonienne

Labat, René, January 1939 (has links)
Thèse--Université de Paris.
25

Neo-Babylonian business and administrative documents with transliteration, translation and notes,

Moore, Ellen Whitley, Contenau, G. January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Michigan, 1932. / Without thesis note. "Lithoprinted." "A transliteration and a translation of tablets belonging to the Louvre collection which have been copied and published by G. Conteneau in volumes XII and XIII of 'Textes cuneiformes' Musée du Louvre Department des antiquités orientales, under the title 'Contrats neo-babyloniens'"--Pref. "Abbreviations of works cited": p. xiv-xv.
26

Le caractère religieux de la royauté assyro-babylonienne,

Labat, René, January 1939 (has links)
Thèse--Université de Paris.
27

L'armée en Babylonie du VIè au IVè siècle av. N. È / Military in Babylonia from 6th to 4th BCE

Gombert, Bruno 06 July 2018 (has links)
Traiter de l'armée en Babylonie du VIe au IVe siècle av. n. è. consiste moins en une étude sur la guerre qu'en un essai d'histoire économique, sociale et institutionnelle, puisque la documentation cunéiforme produite à cette époque est constituée essentiellement de sources de la pratique. La nature de l'armée qui permit l'émergence et l'expansion de l'empire néo-babylonien (622-539 av. n. è.) a été étudiée à partir de trois milieux sociaux qui contribuaient à sa construction: Les temples qui fournissaient à l'armée royale des troupes d'appoint, formées par leurs oblats, une catégorie d'individus non libres qui leur avaient été dédiés, parmi lesquels certains étaient formés au maniement des armes. Les élites babyloniennes qui payaient une redevance en compensation du service, mais dont la participation se développe surtout à l'époque achéménide. Les colons militaires, des soldats souvent non babyloniens qui avaient reçu une parcelle allouée de la Couronne en échange d'une redevance en nature et d'une obligation de service militaire. À partir de 539 av. n. è. l'armée néo-babylonienne est démantelée suite à la conquête de Babylone par Cyrus le Grand et la région est intégrée au nouvel empire achéménide (539-331 av. 11.-è.). Cependant, les structures institutionnelles qui permettaient sa construction sont maintenues, voire développée dans le cas des notables, non plus uniquement pour fournir des soldats, mais aussi des travailleurs qui allaient se rendre en Perse participer aux grands chantiers organisés par l'administration royale. Pareillement, les souverains achéménides profitèrent du riche espace agricole pour poursuivre la politique d'attribution de terres aux soldats. / Studying the Army in Babylonia between the 6th and the 4th century BCE consists less of a "war study” than an essay on economic, social and institutional history as Cuneiform documentation originating from this period consist essentially of administrative and economic texts. The composition of the military which allowed the emergence and expansion of the Neo Babylonian empire (622 -539 BCE), is studied from the perspective of three social backgrounds which contributed to its establishment: The temples which provided the royal army with support troops, issued from their oblates, a category of individuals denied of freedom who were dedicated to the temple. Some of them were trained in handling weapons. The Babylonian traditional elites who paid a fee to compensate for the service. Their participation developed mainly from the Achaemenid Period Military colonists who were non-Babylonian soldiers receiving an allotment from the Crown in exchange of a fee paid in kind and a duty of military service From 539 BCE onward, the Babylonian army was probably dismantled following the Babylonian conquest by Cyrus the Great and the region was integrated to the new Achaemenid empire (539 -331 BCE). Nonetheless, institutional structures enabling its establishment were maintained or developed in the case of the contribution of the notability, providing soldiers but also workers travelling to Persia to participate in the large construction works of the Royal administration. In a similar way, the Achaemenid kings made use of the rich agricultural lands in order to pursue the policy consisting of allocating lands to soldiers.
28

Iraqi refugees' assisted and spontaneous return from Syria and Jordan

Iaria, Vanessa January 2013 (has links)
The thesis investigates the causes and nature of return in the context of the Iraqis displaced to Syria and Jordan after the 2003 US-led war in Iraq. It combines critical International Relations theories with transnational approaches in Migration Studies to investigate: (1) how regional and international geopolitics have shaped asylum and migration regimes in the Middle East; (2) how Iraqi forced migrants have interacted with such regimes in order to reach safety, sustainable livelihoods and personal development opportunities and; (3) the decision-making processes and transnational migration practices of Iraqi individuals and families. It finds that Iraqis' returns result from the uneasy interaction between international and national asylum and migration regimes and the lack of agreement on a common legal framework for durable solutions to the Iraqi displacement. The presence and mobility of the Iraqis in Syria and Jordan are regulated within national immigration systems. The immigration and residency policies of the home and host governments confirm the historical importance of voluntary and involuntary population movements as a nation-building and governance tool in the Middle East. Regional governments and international agencies manage the Iraqi displaced and steer their return through the provision, or the lack thereof, of assistance and information. The Iraqis respond to the limited institutional assistance and information by developing independent coping strategies and informal information and communication systems based on the use of information and communication technologies and on their transnational mobility and social networks. Transnational mobility and livelihoods therefore constitute a precondition for Iraqis' sustainable return and reintegration in home societies undergoing political and socio-economic transition. In this context, return is a complex process that takes time and entails various degrees and modalities of transnational mobility, social networks and livelihoods connecting host and home societies.
29

Étude d'une archive d'une famille de notables de la ville d'Ur du VIe au IVe siècle av. J.-C. : l'archive des Gallābu / Study of an archive of a nobility familyfrom the city of Ur from the 4th to the 6th century BC : the Gallabu archive

Popova, Olga 28 June 2018 (has links)
La thèse présente la première édition complète et commentée des textes de l'archive de la famille Gallabu, une archive provenant de la ville d'Ur, au sud de la Babylonie. Il s'agit d'une famille de prébendiers-barbiers qui ont laissé la plus longue archive privée du Ier millénaire avant J.-C. Les documents de l'archive s'étalent sur 260 ans et couvrent les périodes néo-babylonienne, achéménide et hellénistique. La thèse présente une réflexion sur la nature de l'archive des Gallabu et étudie l'histoire particulière de la famille et de son patrimoine. La famille des Gallabu est placée par la suite dans un contexte politique et socio-économique plus large pour étudier de différents aspects de la vie socio-économique des notables urbains à Ur au Ier millénaire avant J.-C., la seconde ville méridionale la plus importante à cette époque. / This work presents the first complete and annotated edition of the texts from the Gallabu family archive, from the city of Ur in southern Babylonia. It is a family of prebendaries-barbers that left the longest known private archive in the first century BC. Documents of the archive cover over 260 years and include Neo-Babylonian, Achaemenid, and Hellenistic periods. The thesis provides an insight into the nature of the Gallabu archive and examines the history of the family and its heritage. The family of Gallabu is considered within a political and socio-economic context in order to study different aspects of the socio-economic life of the urban elite of the city of Ur in the first millennium BC, the second most important city in southern Babylonia at the time.
30

Teologické a religionistické aspekty vědeckého sporu ,,Babel-Bibel" / The Theological and Comparative Religious Aspects of the Scholarly Dispute ,,Babel-Bibel"

Sýkorová, Jitka January 2017 (has links)
This dissertation thematically belongs to the field of "History of Science and Scholarly Knowledge" with significant reach to theology and exegesis. It concerns the dispute of whether the annunciated text of the Old Testament was in all respects original or if it in some respects followed the traditions of ancient Near Eastern civilizations, particularly the Sumero-Akkadian one. The purpose of this thesis is to introduce the fundamental information on the "Babel-Bibel" dispute to the Czech scholarly community for the very first time. The dissertation includes an analysis of the course and consequences of the dispute as well as a discussion of the impact of Oriental scholarship on Old Testament exegesis.

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