Palace-Clan Relations in the Bronze and Iron Ages Levant
Textual and Material Approaches
Series: Archaeology of the Biblical Worlds; 6;
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher De Gruyter
- Date of Publication 21 July 2025
- ISBN 9783111405513
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages250 pages
- Size 240x170 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations 35 Illustrations, color; 19 Illustrations, black & white 680
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Long description:
Recent studies have demonstrated that ancient Near Eastern societies considered themselves as part of one social fabric, divided not by mode of life or place of residence, but according to traditional associations of kin. Kinship relations appear to maintain their essential integrity over long periods of time, even within complex political organizations. In the past it was common to view state formation as an evolutionary process – from tribe to state – during which former kinship relations and tribal identities dissolve in face of the political identity imposed by the "state". Today, however, it seems that there were no evolutionary relations between the tribe and the state, as they both represent identities that coexist at the same time. It is against this background that a common structural element of ancient Levantine polities emerges: their fragmented nature, mostly based on an overarching concept of kinship.
This book presents studies of different polities and societies from the Bronze and Iron Ages Levant and beyond, highlighting their kin-based social and political structures, interactions, and ultimate formations, as may be gleaned from both material and textual sources.
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