Title:
Mapping Political Diversity
Subtitle:
Some Thoughts on Devising a Historiographical Map of Seventh-Century BC Egypt
Author(s):
Wasmuth, Melanie
Year of publication:
2018
Available Date:
2019-02-07T11:33:58Z
Abstract:
The social and cultural developments in the Eastern Mediter-ranean Area of Connectivity in the 8th to 6th c. BC are stronglyrooted in the cross-regional mobility and subsequent culturaldiversity that resulted from the various local strategies in thesouthern Levant and the Nile delta of challenging and outma-neuvering the super-powers. Yet, historiographical maps of 7thc. Egypt predominantly depict the political landscape – if at all– as the dominion of politically homogeneous entities: as parteither of the Assyrian empire, or of the Kushite empire, or ofa local power. By contrast, this paper discusses an alternativevisualization, which indicates historical complexity with theaim of triggering further research.
Keywords:
cartography
historiographical mapping
thematic maps
Egypt
1st millennium BC
political diversity
historical complexity
DDC-Classification:
900 Geschichte und Geografie
Publication Type:
Buchkapitel
URL of the Original Publication:
DOI of the Original Publication:
Book Title:
Mapping Ancient Identities
Editor:
Susanne Grunwald, Kerstin P. Hofmann, Daniel A. Werning, Felix Wiedemann
Department/institution:
Geschichts- und Kulturwissenschaften
Series/Multivolume:
Berlin Studies of the Ancient World
Series/Multivolume Number:
55