COURSE OUTLINE
Instructor: |
Dr.
Ewa Wasilewska |
Office
hours: |
By
appointment only; please call the Department of Anthropology (581-6251)
and leave your name, phone number, and class number. email: mruczek@aol.com |
Time: |
Each
Tuesday at 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. |
Location: |
Campus
ST 205 |
Important
dates: |
Sept.
2, 05 - last day to drop classes
Sept.
6, 05 - last day to add classes
Sept.
6, 05 - last day to elect CR/NC option or to audit classes
Oct.
21, 05 - last day to withdraw from term length classes |
Required
Texts: |
Marc
Van De Mieroop: A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 B.C.
Blackwell Publishing. 2005. (MM)
Dominique
Collon: Ancient Near Eastern Art. University of California Press:
Berkeley. 1995. (DC)
Martha
T. Roth: Law Collections from Mesopotamia and Asia Minor. Scholars
Press. 1997. (MR)
The
above books can be purchased at the University of Utah Bookstore.
The
above books will also be available at the Reserve Desk at Marriott Library. |
Optional
Texts: |
Ewa
Wasilewska: Cuneiform Cultures of the Biblical World. Notes. 2005.
(EW)
Notes
can be purchased during the first three class meetings from an instructor.
Ewa
Wasilewska: Creation Stories of the Middle East. Jessica Kingsley
Publishers: 2000. (EWB) |
Subject: |
This
course is an introduction to archaeology, religion, history, art, architecture,
and other aspects of the cultural mosaic of the cuneiform cultures of the
ancient Middle East. It focuses on ancient Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Syria-Palestine,
and Persia with references to Egypt whenever appropriate. It covers the
period directly preceding the invention of writing in southern Mesopotamia
(the second half of the fourth millennium B.C.) until the Hellenistic period,
beginning with the conquest/liberation of the Middle East by Alexander
the Great in the fourth century B.C.
Throughout
the semester special focus will be paid to theoretical and methodological
issues involved in interpreting ancient Middle Eastern records. Among problems
to be discussed are chronology of the Middle East, the interpretation of
written records and main characteristics of archaeological artifacts, which
facilitate the process of proper identification of cultural groups and
interpretation of behavioral patterns.
During
the semester numerous references will be made to ancient cultures outside
of the Middle Eastern realm, which were in contact with Mesopotamia, Anatolia,
Syria-Palestine, and Persia. Depending on the amount of accessible and
identifiable sources, such regions as the Aegean world, the Central Asian
and Siberian nomadic cultures, the Indus Valley and, whenever possible
China, will be mentioned when relevant.
Students
should realize that this course is very important for their overall education
since many concepts and achievements developed in the ancient Middle East
have had enormous impact on the development of Western and other civilizations. |
Requirements: |
UNDERGRADUATE
STUDENTS
The
final grade will be based on three or four exams. Exams will consist of
different sections (including essay questions) especially designed for
the type of material, which will be covered during class meetings.
In order to pass these exams it is necessary to attend lectures and to
read the required material. Since the amount of information to which students
will be exposed is significant, three or four extra review sessions are
planned after the last session before each exam, after the regular class
period. The most important information, names, terms, definitions, etc.,
can be found in the notes prepared by the instructor in order to structure
the learning process in the most effective way. At the end of the semester
each student will be required to write a ca. 5 page essay on the topic
that he or she found the most interesting with regard to the influence
of ancient Mesopotamian, Anatolian, Pre-Biblical Levantine or Persian civilizations
on modern cultures.
GRADUATE
STUDENTS
In
addition to the requirements listed above, graduate students are required
to write a research paper of ca. 20 pages (plus bibliography). Each topic
must be discussed with the instructor first and at the end of the semester
each graduate student will be asked to present a brief summary of his or
her research to the class. |
..
Week
# 1 - August 30, 2005
Terminology.
Time and Space. Discoveries of forgotten civilizations.
Readings
for Week 1:
EW:
H. # 1
MM:
Introductory Concerns. Pp. 1-16.
DC:
Introduction. Pp. 7-40. |
......... |
|
Week
# 2 - September 6, 2005
Ancient
Sumer and Akkad: Formation of the city-states and their development.
Readings
for Week 2:
EW:
H. # 2
MM:
Pp. 17-69 (from Week 2 up till Week 5)
DC:
Pp. 41-55 |
........... |
|
Week
# 3 - September 13, 2005
Ancient
Sumer and Akkad: Development and
use of writing.
Readings
for Week 3:
EW:
H. # 3
MM:
Pp. 17-69 (from Week 2 up till Week 5)
|
........... |
|
Week
# 4 - September 20, 2005
Ancient
Sumer and Akkad: Art and Architecture
of the 3rd mill.
B.C.
Readings
for Week 4:
EW:
H. # 4
DC:
pp. 56-89
|
........... |
|
Week
# 5 - September 27, 2005
Ancient
Sumer and Akkad: Religion and Law.
Readings
for Week 5 & 6:
EW:
H. #5 & 6
MR:
Laws of the Third Millennium B.C.
REVIEW!!! |
.......... |
|
Week
# 6 - October 4, 2005
Week
# 7 - October 11, 2005
New
People, New Empires: Territorial States
of the Early
2nd mill. B.C.
Readings
for Week 7:
EW:
H. # 7
MM:
Pp. 80-118 |
.......... |
|
Week
# 8 - October 18, 2005
New
People, New Religions: Political, Economic, Social, and Cultural Interactions
Among the
Powers of the
2nd mill. B.C. Part 1.
Readings
for Week 8 & 9:
EW:
H. # 8 & 9
MM:
Pp. 119-189
MR:
laws of the 2nd mill. B.C. |
.......... |
|
Week
# 9 - October 25, 2005
New
People, New Religions: Political, Economic, Social, and Cultural Interactions
Among the
Powers of the
2nd mill. B.C. Part 2. |
........... |
|
Week
# 10 - November 1, 2005
The
2nd mill. B.C.: Art and Architecture.
Readings
for Week 10:
EW:
H. # 10 & 11
DC:
90-127
Review
!!!
|
......... |
|
Week
# 11 - November 8, 2005
Week
# 12 - November 15, 2005
The
Middle East at the Beginning of the First Millennium B.C.
Readings
for Week 12:
EW:
H. # 12
MM:
Pp. 195-231
|
.......... |
|
Week
# 13 - November 22, 2005
The
Rise and Fall of the Assyrian Empire.
Readings
for Week 13:
EW:
H. # 13
MM:
Pp. 232-252
MR:
Assyrian Laws.
|
.......... |
|
Week
# 14 - November 29, 2005
The
Rise and Fall of the Persian Empire.
Readings
for Week 14:
EW:
H. # 14
MM:
Pp. 253-280.
MR:
Neo-Babylonian Laws.
|
.......... |
|
Week
# 15 - December 6, 2005
The
1st mill. B.C.: Art and Architecture.
Readings
for Week 15:
EW:
H. # 15
DC:
Pp. 128-187
Review!!! |
.......... |
|
Week
# 16 - December 13, 2005
EXAM
!!!
Last day to turn
in your final essay and/or research papers.
Ewa
Wasilewska's Home Page |