

Babylon: Mesopotamia and the Birth of Civilization [Kriwaczek, Paul] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Babylon: Mesopotamia and the Birth of Civilization Review: This is an excellent survey of ancient Mesopotamian civilisation - This is an excellent survey of ancient Mesopotamian civilisation, from its beginnings 5000 years ago until the occupation of Babylon by Cyrus of Persia. Kriwaczek writes in an erudite journalistic style that is a pleasure to read. The author uses major historical events to provide a kind of narrative tension, and between these he draws on many different sources to recreate detailed impresssions of ancient daily life, including excerpts from the actual stories, myths, epic poems and letters preserved on steles and clay tablets. The result is a remarkably well paced overview of human civilisation as an arc, passing through different societies over thousands of years. The book itself is a very satisfying read, but it also concludes with a long annotated reading list, for those want to explore specific topics in more detail. * Note that the Kindle edition has all of the maps (there are 8 of them) but none of the photo illustrations, which is really a pity. And I can't imagine why it should have been so difficult to include them: even a low-res black & white photo would be enough to give first-timers like me an idea of what a ziggurat looks like, for example. But the text of the book still reads well enough without them. Review: The Driest Four Stars I have Issued - Much of the book was dry and hard to digest. It was excellent. I don't think this was the author's fault, though. It is subject matter. The author had a writing style I really liked. He had both philosophical and psychological insight. Additionally, the book filled so many gaps in my knowledge of ancient history that I lost count. He did rush through the latter part, the part on Assyria, and I thank God that he did. The character of Assyria does not fit with the over-all character of millennia of Mesopotamian history. Overall, the story of Sumer, really over half the text of the book, was fascinating, as was the story of Babylon. If you are looking for a book with lots of tales of titillating battles and military strategy, then this is definitely not the book for you. There is very little of that. This book deals with archeological discoveries, some of them quite revealing and quite amazing, and with the philosophical and politically strategic patterns in history prior the "Story of the Greeks and Persians." It discusses ancient Mesopotamian Law and sense of Justice, sociology and religious philosophy. It discussing what we know about these and more importantly, how we know. It correlates the study to modern times, to Biblical Times and to relevant similar times throughout history. One review of a book I read about Ancient Macedonia criticized that author's lack of "insight," because the reviewer did not feel that the author delved deeply enough into the underlying thought patterns of the time. No one would ever make such a charge against the author of this work. One such example is his analysis of the origins of modern day monotheism and religious misogyny that was partially borne in Assyria, and how, with the changing view of what the role of God was and what his relationship to humans is, it was inevitable (that discussion, the best part of the book, begins on page 225 if you are truly interested).
| Best Sellers Rank | #70,479 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #4 in Assyria, Babylonia & Sumer History #7 in Iraq History (Books) #35 in History of Civilization & Culture |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,001) |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10 | 1250054168 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1250054166 |
| Item Weight | 1 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 338 pages |
| Publication date | March 27, 2012 |
| Publisher | St. Martin's Griffin |
U**R
This is an excellent survey of ancient Mesopotamian civilisation
This is an excellent survey of ancient Mesopotamian civilisation, from its beginnings 5000 years ago until the occupation of Babylon by Cyrus of Persia. Kriwaczek writes in an erudite journalistic style that is a pleasure to read. The author uses major historical events to provide a kind of narrative tension, and between these he draws on many different sources to recreate detailed impresssions of ancient daily life, including excerpts from the actual stories, myths, epic poems and letters preserved on steles and clay tablets. The result is a remarkably well paced overview of human civilisation as an arc, passing through different societies over thousands of years. The book itself is a very satisfying read, but it also concludes with a long annotated reading list, for those want to explore specific topics in more detail. * Note that the Kindle edition has all of the maps (there are 8 of them) but none of the photo illustrations, which is really a pity. And I can't imagine why it should have been so difficult to include them: even a low-res black & white photo would be enough to give first-timers like me an idea of what a ziggurat looks like, for example. But the text of the book still reads well enough without them.
A**S
The Driest Four Stars I have Issued
Much of the book was dry and hard to digest. It was excellent. I don't think this was the author's fault, though. It is subject matter. The author had a writing style I really liked. He had both philosophical and psychological insight. Additionally, the book filled so many gaps in my knowledge of ancient history that I lost count. He did rush through the latter part, the part on Assyria, and I thank God that he did. The character of Assyria does not fit with the over-all character of millennia of Mesopotamian history. Overall, the story of Sumer, really over half the text of the book, was fascinating, as was the story of Babylon. If you are looking for a book with lots of tales of titillating battles and military strategy, then this is definitely not the book for you. There is very little of that. This book deals with archeological discoveries, some of them quite revealing and quite amazing, and with the philosophical and politically strategic patterns in history prior the "Story of the Greeks and Persians." It discusses ancient Mesopotamian Law and sense of Justice, sociology and religious philosophy. It discussing what we know about these and more importantly, how we know. It correlates the study to modern times, to Biblical Times and to relevant similar times throughout history. One review of a book I read about Ancient Macedonia criticized that author's lack of "insight," because the reviewer did not feel that the author delved deeply enough into the underlying thought patterns of the time. No one would ever make such a charge against the author of this work. One such example is his analysis of the origins of modern day monotheism and religious misogyny that was partially borne in Assyria, and how, with the changing view of what the role of God was and what his relationship to humans is, it was inevitable (that discussion, the best part of the book, begins on page 225 if you are truly interested).
M**E
Mighty Kings, Heroes and Gods
Extremely interesting and well written history! Going back before 4,000 BC; speaking of Gilgamesh and The Flood and how civilization developed into Babylon and Assyria. Black and white maps and photos. Highly recommend!!
G**S
seeds of current events planted 4500 years ago
This book shows how the distant past has much to teach us, and one thing that caught me by surprise was that the financial system was every bit as complex as ours (futures and all), and it's impressive because they did it without computers. A scribe was a combination lawyer/ banker drawing up contracts, and all they had was their memory, a stick and slabs of clay. Their free-wheeling economic system crashed and burned too, usually resulting in people having to sell themselves or other family members into slavery to cover their debts. Fortunately we have now have bankruptcy as an option and have done away with the slavery, but you can see that either way there is no happy ending. It's too bad this isn't widely known or maybe someone might have spotted the parallels with our own situation in time to avert trouble. The book is packed with fascinating facts and you learn a lot about why the Middle East is the way it is. Some thinking that seems backward to us makes perfect sense when you find out the context and back-story; we still may not agree with it but at least we will understand it better. This should be a text book used in grade school when studying about the earliest civilizations instead of the boring stuff they're using now. I love history and reading but was put off this subject in school years ago due to the horrible text books, and only started reading about the period again after taking an art history course- the images drew me in. These people are interesting, and Mr. Kriwaczek makes it clear that there were some real characters. After all, history is the never-ending story of what actual people did, and it should be a crime to squeeze the life out of it. That's not a problem with this book and I enjoyed learning from it.
M**D
Very well written, the subject is fascinating. I did not know that much about Mesopotamia before reading this book, especially taht they had tried so many different systems or that they were so closely related to our present day ideas, techniques and myths.
P**G
Este libro es una de las joyas de kindle, es sin duda la historia de babilonia con muchas relaciones a temas de la actualidad, momentos de descubirimientos o devastaciones arqueologicas importantes, es un libro que se disfrutará mucho y contiene alto contenido historico pero relatado con una narrativa interesante y no tediosa.
F**O
Lo he comprado a través del vendedor que recomendaba amazon, the book depository y sólo me ha costado 6 euros y 3 de envío. Total: 9 euros. Ha tardado unos 10 días en llegar en perfecto estado a través de corros. Una compra totalmente recomendada.
A**R
Interesting Well written.
M**N
It’s more about Mesopotamia and is talking to much about the present. Then and there-there is Good info, but usually it’s just a bunch whole of nothing for those who don’t study it. DONT BUY if you want straight chronological order- and no commentary.
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