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Winner of the Runciman Award Winner of the Charles J. Goodwin Award
"Tells the story of how the Seleucid Empire revolutionized
chronology by picking a Year One and counting from there, rather
than starting a new count, as other states did, each time a new
monarch was crowned...Fascinating." -Harper's In the aftermath of
Alexander the Great's conquests, his successors, the Seleucid
kings, ruled a vast territory stretching from Central Asia and
Anatolia to the Persian Gulf. In 305 BCE, in a radical move to
impose unity and regulate behavior, Seleucus I introduced a linear
conception of time. Time would no longer restart with each new
monarch. Instead, progressively numbered years-continuous and
irreversible-became the de facto measure of historical duration.
This new temporality, propagated throughout the empire and
identical to the system we use today, changed how people did
business, recorded events, and oriented themselves to the larger
world. Some rebellious subjects, eager to resurrect their
pre-Hellenic past, rejected this new approach and created
apocalyptic time frames, predicting the total end of history. In
this magisterial work, Paul Kosmin shows how the Seleucid Empire's
invention of a new kind of time-and the rebellions against this
worldview-had far reaching political and religious consequences,
transforming the way we organize our thoughts about the past,
present, and future. "Without Paul Kosmin's meticulous
investigation of what Seleucus achieved in creating his calendar
without end we would never have been able to comprehend the traces
of it that appear in late antiquity...A magisterial contribution to
this hitherto obscure but clearly important restructuring of time
in the ancient Mediterranean world." -G. W. Bowersock, New York
Review of Books "With erudition, theoretical sophistication, and
meticulous discussion of the sources, Paul Kosmin sheds new light
on the meaning of time, memory, and identity in a multicultural
setting." -Angelos Chaniotis, author of Age of Conquests
A Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year The Seleucid Empire
(311-64 BCE) was unlike anything the ancient Mediterranean and Near
Eastern worlds had seen. Stretching from present-day Bulgaria to
Tajikistan-the bulk of Alexander the Great's Asian conquests-the
kingdom encompassed a territory of remarkable ethnic, religious,
and linguistic diversity; yet it did not include Macedonia, the
ancestral homeland of the dynasty. The Land of the Elephant Kings
investigates how the Seleucid kings, ruling over lands to which
they had no historic claim, attempted to transform this territory
into a coherent and meaningful space. "This engaging book appeals
to the specialist and non-specialist alike. Kosmin has successfully
brought together a number of disparate fields in a new and creative
way that will cause a reevaluation of how the Seleucids have
traditionally been studied." -Jeffrey D. Lerner, American
Historical Review "It is a useful and bright introduction to
Seleucid ideology, history, and position in the ancient world."
-Jan P. Stronk, American Journal of Archaeology
This collaborative volume examines revolts and resistance to the
successor states, formed after Alexander the Great's conquest of
the Persian empire, as a transregional phenomenon. The editors have
assembled an array of specialists in the study of the various
regions and cultures of the Hellenistic world - Judea, Egypt,
Babylonia, Central Asia, and Asia Minor - in an effort to trace
comparisons and connections between episodes and modes of
resistance. The volume seeks to unite the currently dominant
social-scientific orientation to ancient resistance and revolt with
perspectives, often coming from religious studies, that are more
attentive to local cultural, religious, and moral frameworks. In
re-assessing these frameworks, contributors move beyond
Greek/non-Greek binaries to examine resistance as complex and
entangled: acts and articulations of resistance are not purely
nativistic or 'nationalist', but conditioned by local traditions of
government, historical memories of prior periods, as well as
emergent transregional Hellenistic political and cultural idioms.
Cultures of Resistance in the Hellenistic East is organized into
three parts. The first part investigates the Great Theban Revolt
and the Maccabean Revolt, the central cases for large, organized,
and prolonged military uprisings against the Hellenistic kingdoms.
The second part examines the full gamut of indigenous
self-assertion and resistant action, including theologies of
monarchic inadequacy, patterns of historical periodization and
textual interpretation, and claims to sites of authority. The
volume's final part turns to the more ambiguous assertions of local
autonomy and identity that emerge in the frontier regions that
slipped in and out of the grasp of the great Hellenistic powers.
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