Peripheral Concerns

Urban Development in the Bronze Age Southern Levant

by Susan Cohen, Montana State University

Peripheral Concerns examines the influence of one “core” region of the ancient Near Eastern world—Egypt—on urban development in the southern Levant in the Early and Middle Bronze Ages, with emphasis on the relative stability and sustainability of this development in each era. The study utilizes a very broad scale “macro” approach to examine urban development using core-periphery theories, specifically in regard to southern Levantine-Egyptian interactions.

While many studies examine urban development in both the Early Bronze Age and the Middle Bronze Age, few compare this phenomenon in the two periods. Likewise, there are few studies of urban development in the southern Levant that compare contemporary Egyptian policies in that region to those in Nubia, despite the fact that Egyptian activities linked the eastern Mediterranean, the Nile Valley, and Nubia into one interactive system. The broad chronological and geographic framework utilized in this study therefore allows for a new approach to urban development in the southern Levant.

ISBN-13 (Hardback) 9781781791776
Price (Hardback) £75.00 / $100.00
ISBN (eBook) 9781781793718
Price (eBook) Individual £75.00 / $100.00
Institutional £75.00 / $100.00
Publication 10/04/2016
Pages 188
Size 246 x 189mm
Readership scholars
Illustration 14 figures

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Metadata

  • isbn
    9781781791776 (Hardback)
    9781781793718 (eBook)
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield (U.K.)
  • series title
    New Directions in Anthropological Archaeology
  • doi