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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history
Robert Lachmann's letters to Henry George Farmer, from the years
1923-38, provide insightful glimpses into his life and his
progressive research projects. From an historical perspective, they
offer critical data concerning the development of comparative
musicology as it evolved in Germany during the early decades of the
twentieth century. The fact that Lachmann sought contact with
Farmer can be explained from their mutual, yet diverse interests in
Arab music, particularly as they were then considered to be the
foremost European scholars in the field. During the 1932 Cairo
International Congress on Arab Music, they were selected as
presidents of their respective committees.
This book presents a new model for understanding the collection of
ancient kingdoms that surrounded the northeast corner of the
Mediterranean Sea from the Cilician Plain in the west to the upper
Tigris River in the east, and from Cappadocia in the north to
western Syria in the south, during the Iron Age of the ancient Near
East (ca. 1200 to 600 BCE). Rather than presenting them as
homogenous ethnolinguistic communities like "the Aramaeans" or "the
Luwians" living in neatly bounded territories, this book sees these
polities as being fundamentally diverse and variable, distinguished
by demographic fluidity and cultural mobility. The Syro-Anatolian
City-States sheds new light via an examination of a host of
evidentiary sources, including archaeological site plans,
settlement patterns, visual arts, and historical sources. Together,
these lines of evidence reveal a complex fusion of cultural
traditions that is nevertheless distinctly recognizable unto
itself. This book is the first to specifically characterize the
Iron Age city-states of southeastern Turkey and northern Syria,
arguing for a unified cultural formation characterized above all by
diversity and mobility and that can be referred to as the
"Syro-Anatolian Culture Complex."
Eighteen expert researchers have come together to provide original
articles and new perspectives on transformation throughout Ottoman
history, in order to honor the life's work of Metin Kunt. Kunt's
work revolutionized our understanding of change in Ottoman
political, social and cultural history in the late 16th and early
17th centuries. This new collection focuses on the contributions of
key players in these fields and includes chapters on Ottoman
artisans in a changing political context, Ottoman chief scribes and
the rhetorics of political survival in the 17th century, and
empiricism in the Ottoman Empire. Contributors are Antonis
Anastasopoulos, Iris Agmon, Tulay Artan, Karl K. Barbir, Fatih
Bayram, Suraiya Faroqhi, Cornell H. Fleischer, Pal Fodor, Mehmet
Kalpakli, Cemil Kocak, B. Harun Kucuk, Asli Niyazioglu, Mehmet OEz,
Kaya Sahin, Derin Terzioglu, Ekin Tusalp-Atiyas, Christine
Woodhead, N. Zeynep Yelce, Elizabeth A. Zachariadou.
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