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Architecture, Assyro-Babylonian --- Palaces --- Architecture assyro-babylonienne --- Palais --- -Buildings --- Assyro-Babylonian architecture --- Architecture, Assyro-Babylonian. --- -Architecture, Assyro-Babylonian --- Iraq --- Bronze age --- Âge du bronze --- Mésopotamie --- Dessins et plans --- Antiquités
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Civilization, Assyro-Babylonian --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Civilisation assyro-babylonienne --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Iraq --- Irak --- History --- Antiquities --- Histoire --- Antiquités --- Mésopotamie --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Antiquités --- Art --- Histoire. --- 932 --- oudheid --- antiquité
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According to archaeological evidence gleaned over more than 70 years, Mari appears to have been the most important city in northern Mesopotamia from its foundation at about 2950 BC to 1760 BC. Situated at the heart of a river system and progressively linked with an overland network, Mari was the city that controlled the relations of central and southern Mesopotamia with the regions bordering the Taurus and Zagros mountains to the north and east and the Mediterranean coastal zone to the west. Mari drew its power from this situation, and the role it played accounts for the particularity of its features, positioned as it was between the Syrian, Assyrian, Iranian, Babylonian and Sumerian worlds. The evidence shows that there was not one city of Mari, but three successive cities, each having specific features, although there is a striking permanence in the original forms. The first, City I, founded in about 2950 BC, was based on remarkable principles of city planning, including a broad regional development with the creation of canals for irrigation and transport, one more than 120 km long. In the 23rd century BC City II was founded using impressive technology in city planning. Probably destroyed by Naram-Sin of Akkad about 2200 BC, it was entirely reconstructed as City III by a new dynasty, the Shakkanakku. In the 19th century BC this was replaced by an Amorite dynasty, which ruled until Hammurabi of Babylon destroyed Mari in 1760 BC. The diversity of the information and material that has been recovered confirms Mari’s place as one of the best sources for understanding the brilliant Mesopotamian civilisation that developed between the beginning of the 3rd and the end of the 1st millennium BC.
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Architecture --- Social archaeology --- Capitals (Cities) --- Regionalism --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Archéologie sociale --- Capitales --- Régionalisme --- History --- Histoire --- Mari (Extinct city) --- Syria --- Euphrates River Valley --- Mari (Ville ancienne) --- Syrie --- Euphrate, Vallée de l' --- Antiquities. --- Antiquities --- Antiquités --- Archéologie --- Archeologische vondsten. --- Opgravingen. --- Architecture. --- Capitals (Cities). --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Regionalism. --- Social archaeology. --- History. --- Euphrates River Region --- Mari (Syrië) --- Middle East --- Syria. --- Mari (Extinct city). --- Mari (Syrië). --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Archéologie sociale --- Régionalisme --- Euphrate, Vallée de l' --- Antiquités
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L'émergence des premières villes de l'histoire, en Mésopotamie, à la fin du IVe millénaire, témoigne de la prise de conscience par les fondateurs que le nouveau cadre de vie exigeait une préparation et une organisation destinées à assurer à la fois la longévité et l'harmonie de la construction urbaine. à l'aube de l'histoire, un véritable urbanisme, totalement différent de celui, postérieur, des cités grecques, fut alors systématiquement mis en place, tenant compte de deux dangers majeurs : la vulnérabilité de l'architecture de briques crues face aux menaces de l'eau et l'instabilité de sols très hétérogènes, impropres à supporter les charges de bâtiments de plus d'un niveau. Une remarquable inventivité et une étonnante compréhension du milieu ressortent des solutions mises en œuvre par les Mésopotamiens. Ils dotent leurs villes de plans géométriques parfaitement adaptés au terrain, capables d'éliminer les eaux de pluie (utilisation de voies radiales, de canaux intérieurs ou périphériques, de "chaussées absorbantes"). Ils aménagent une "infrastructure compartimentée" qui assure toute l'organisation de la ville et de sa voirie, permet d'éloigner le niveau d'occupation de la nappe phréatique et de stabiliser de façon homogène l'ensemble du bâti. De tels travaux entraînent la fondation de villes neuves. Certaines d'entre elles, fondées au IIIe millénaire, étaient toujours actives mille, voir deux mille ans plus tard, après plusieurs reconstructions complètes. C'est notamment le cas de Mari, Babylone ou Larsa. Cet urbanisme n'a jamais été transmis par les textes : seule l'archéologie a pu le mettre en évidence par la confrontation systématique d'un certain nombre de sites.
City planning --- Cities and towns, Ancient --- Architecture, Ancient --- Urbanisme --- Villes antiques --- Architecture antique --- History --- Histoire --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- History. --- Mesopotamia --- Archaeology --- Archaeology.
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