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Urartians. --- Armenia --- Ourartou (Royaume). --- Civilization. --- Antiquities.
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Urartians. --- Armenia (Republic) --- Armenia --- Urartu. --- Antiquities. --- Civilization.
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Urartians --- Ourartéens --- Armenia --- Arménie --- History --- Histoire --- Ethnology --- -Urartians. --- Politieke geschiedenis. --- Cultuurgeschiedenis. --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Fouilles archéologiques - Arménie. --- Ourartou (Royaume) --- Urartu. --- Arménie - Jusqu'à 428. --- Ourartou (Royaume) - Histoire. --- Histoire. --- -Urartians --- Urartians. --- Ourartéens --- Arménie
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Urartians --- Handbooks, manuals, etc --- Armenia --- History --- Handbooks, manuals, etc.
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Urartu is still less well known than it should be, despite the best efforts of many of the contributors to the current work. This edited collection of 21 chapters (all but one in English) written by a mixture of established and younger scholars, mainly from Turkey and Armenia but also from Western Europe and North America, offers a very broad coverage of Urartu and its principal sites. It may still leave unclear whether the Urartian state was centralised or decentralised, both (over time) or neither - probably there are as many opinions as contributors. There is not an over-arching narrative. Two chapters consider the state of Urartian studies, one examines Eastern Anatolia before Urartu; others look at Urartian history, economy, architecture, temples and sanctuaries, funerary architecture, pottery, iconography, and metalwork. 'International relations' and Urartian expansion, north, south and west, are the focus of the next three chapters. The final seven consider major Urartian sites: Erzincan/Altintepe Castle, the fortress of Ayanis, Bastam, Sardurihinili-Çavustepe, Erebuni/Arinberd, Karmir-Blur and Tushpa/Van Citadel. The aim has been to produce an in-depth introduction to most matters Urartian.
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Urartu --- Oudheden --- Congressen --- Antiquities, Prehistoric --- Urartians --- Armenian Highlands --- Urartians. --- Ourartéens. --- Antiquities. --- Antiquities, Prehistoric. --- Urartu. --- Asia --- Architecture, Urartian --- Urartian language --- Art, Urartian --- History.
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This overview of current research on the Iron-Age kingdom of Urartu offers studies by thirty scholars who met at an international symposium at Munich University in October 2007. Biainili, as this polity was known to its inhabitants, dominated the mountainous region of what is now eastern Turkey, north-western Iran, and southern Armenia from the ninth to the seventh centuries BC and is distinguished by its unique language and material culture. It was a rival to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which provides much of the evidence for its history as well as the name by which is best known, Urartu (Biblical Ararat). An introductory chapter giving a general account of the history and culture of the kingdom is followed by more focused contributions on numerous aspects of Urartian culture based on textual records and archaeological sources both from Urartu itself and from neighbouring regions.
Urartians --- Art, Urartian --- Ourartéens --- Art ourartien --- Urartu --- Ourartou --- Ourartéens --- Congresses --- Congrès --- Antiquities --- Armenia --- Civilization
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This volume is a tribute to the career of Professor Mirjo Salvini on the occasion his 80th birthday, composed of 62 papers written by his colleagues and students. The majority of contributions deal with research in the fields of Urartian and Hittite Studies, the topics that attracted Prof. Salvini most during his long and fruitful career.
Urartians --- Hittites --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- History. --- Middle East --- History --- Antiquities. --- Ethnology --- Arab countries
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Wie lässt sich Subalternität in der Vergangenheit untersuchen, wenn heute fast ausschließlich Hinterlassenschaften der Eliten erhalten sind? Warum lohnt sich eine solche Untersuchung und wo führt sie hin? Diesen Fragen wird in dem vorliegenden Buch über die Beziehung von Assyrien und Urartu im eisenzeitlichen Nordmesopotamien (ca. 9. bis 7. Jh. v.u.Z.) nachgegangen. Denn zwischen den kriegerischen Nachbarn gab es eine Vielzahl Deportierter und Kriegsgefangener, deren Erfahrungen und Leben in der Forschung bisher wenig Beachtung fanden. Dabei konnten postmoderne und postkoloniale Denker:innen aus Literaturwissenschaften, Humangeographie oder Soziologie unlängst darlegen, dass historisch oft gerade diese ausgegrenzten, vergessenen gesellschaftlichen Gruppen zum Motor von Veränderung werden.Dieses Buch reiht sich ein in einen interdisziplinären Diskurs über Subjektivierung, Produktion von (sozialem) Raum, Subalternität und Habitus, und integriert diese Konzepte in die Archäologie Westasiens. Dabei werden verschiedene Orte mittels Methoden aus dem Feld der ,,Archäologie der Sinne" quantitativ und qualitativ untersucht, um auf die Grundzüge der sinnlichen Organisation Urartus und Assyriens zu schließen. Die Gegenüberstellung der so rekonstruierten sensorischen Welten geschieht vor dem Hintergrund der Frage, wie Deportierte und Kriegsgefangene nach ihrer Verschleppung die neue Umgebung wahrnahmen. Welche Auswirkungen hatte dieser abrupte Wandel der Lebensverhältnisse durch Gefangenschaft und Zwangsumsiedlung? Wie wurden die neuen, subalternen Subjektpositionen nonverbal mittels räumlicher Ordnung kommuniziert und evoziert - und gab es Stellen, an denen es durch Irritation, Missverständnis und ungeplantes Verhalten zu niedrigschwelliger Subversion kam?.
Social history --- Marginality, Social --- Urartians --- Deportees --- Prisoners of war --- Assyria --- Psychology. --- Antiquities.
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Urartians. --- Scythians. --- Scythes --- Antiquities. --- Civilisation. --- Neapolis Scythica (Extinct city) --- Khorezm (Kingdom) --- Arménie --- Kharezm --- Crimée (Ukraine) --- Asia --- Ukraine --- Antiquités.
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