This book investigates the archaeological, epigraphic, and biblical evidence for the course of Ammon's history, setting it squarely within the context of ancient Near Eastern imperialism. Drawing on cross-cultural parallels from the archaeology of empires, Tyson elucidates the dynamic processes by which the local Ammonite elite made the cousins of biblical Israel visible to history. Tyson explains changes in the region of Ammon during the Iron Age II, namely the increasing numbers of locally produced elite items as well as imports, growth in the use of writing for administrative and display purposes, and larger numbers of sedentary settlements; in the light of the transformative role that the Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian empires played in the ancient Near East. The study also widens the conversation to consider cross-cultural examples of how empires affect peripheral societies.
Craig W. Tyson, Ph.D. (University of Michigan) is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at D'Youville College in Buffalo, NY, USA. His publications and research interests focus on the social history of the Levant and literary readings of the Hebrew Bible.
Readers who come to this volume for bibliography and discussion of data relevant to ancient Ammon will find Tyson a reliable and insightful guide Journal of Theological Studies, vol. 65
A very well-crafted volume that summarizes the archaeology of Iron Age Ammon in an up-to-date and state-of-the-art fashion. Tyson deals with a broad range of topics and manages to weave them together into a coherent and convincing picture of this fascinating Iron Age culture. -Review of Biblical Literature
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
List of Figures
List of Tables
Ch 1: INTRODUCTION
Ch 2: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE AMMAN PLATEAU
Ch 3: EPIGRAPHIC SOURCES FOR AMMONITE HISTORY
Ch 4: BIBLICAL AND POSTBIBLICAL SOURCES FOR AMMONITE HISTORY
Ch 5: NEO-ASSYRIAN AND NEO-BABYLOlc*