The recent reopening of Iraq's National Museum attracted
worldwide attention, underscoring the country's dual image as both
the cradle of civilization and a contemporary geopolitical
battleground. A sweeping account of the rich history that has
played out between these chronological poles, "From Mesopotamia to
Iraq "looks back through 10,000 years of the region's deeply
significant yet increasingly overshadowed past.
Hans J. Nissen and Peter Heine begin by explaining how ancient
Mesopotamian inventions--including urban society, a system of
writing, and mathematical texts that anticipated
Pythagoras--profoundly influenced the course of human history.
These towering innovations, they go on to reveal, have sometimes
obscured the major role Mesopotamia continued to play on the world
stage. Alexander the Great, for example, was fascinated by Babylon
and eventually died there. Seventh-century Muslim armies made the
region one of their first conquests outside the Arabian peninsula.
And the Arab caliphs who ruled for centuries after the invasion
built the magnificent city of Baghdad, attracting legions of
artists and scientists. Tracing the evolution of this vibrant
country into a contested part of the Ottoman Empire, a
twentieth-century British colony, a republic ruled by Saddam
Hussein, and the democracy it has become, Nissen and Heine repair
the fragmented image of Iraq that has come to dominate our
collective imagination.
In hardly any other continuously inhabited part of the globe can
we chart such developments in politics, economy, and culture across
so extended a period of time. By doing just that, the authors
illuminate nothing less than the forces that have made the world
what it is today.
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