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Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history
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Ancient Syria - A Three Thousand Year History (Paperback)
Loot Price: R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
You Save: R45
(9%)
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Ancient Syria - A Three Thousand Year History (Paperback)
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List price R508
Loot Price R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
You Save R45 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Syria has long been one of the most trouble-prone and politically
volatile regions of the Near and Middle Eastern world. This book
looks back beyond the troubles of the present to tell the 3000-year
story of what happened many centuries before. Trevor Bryce reveals
the peoples, cities, and kingdoms that arose, flourished, declined,
and disappeared in the lands that now constitute Syria, from the
time of it's earliest written records in the third millennium BC
until the reign of the Roman emperor Diocletian at the turn of the
3-4th century AD. Across the centuries, from the Bronze Age to the
Rome Era, we encounter a vast array of characters and
civilizations, enlivening, enriching, and besmirching the annals of
Syrian history: Hittite and Assyrian Great Kings; Egyptian
pharaohs; Amorite robber-barons; the biblically notorious
Nebuchadnezzar; Persia's Cyrus the Great and Macedon's Alexander
the Great; the rulers of the Seleucid empire; and an assortment of
Rome's most distinguished and most infamous emperors. All swept
across the plains of Syria at some point in her long history. All
contributed, in one way or another, to Syria's special, distinctive
character, as they imposed themselves upon it, fought one another
within it, or pillaged their way through it. But this is not just a
history of invasion and oppression. Syria had great rulers of her
own, native-born Syrian luminaries, sometimes appearing as local
champions who sought to liberate their lands from foreign despots,
sometimes as cunning, self-seeking manipulators of squabbles
between their overlords. They culminate with Zenobia, Queen of
Palmyra, whose life provides a fitting grand finale to the first
three millennia of Syria's recorded history. The conclusion looks
forward to the Muslim conquest in the 7th century AD: in many ways
the opening chapter in the equally complex and often troubled
history of modern Syria.
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