>The jihadis blew up a hilltop mosque in Nineveh, near Mosul in Iraq, believed to be the resting place of the prophet Jonah.
Let's talk about the hanging Gardens of Babylon, what was its purpose in the first place?
dailystar.co.uk
>The jihadis blew up a hilltop mosque in Nineveh, near Mosul in Iraq, believed to be the resting place of the prophet Jonah.
Let's talk about the hanging Gardens of Babylon, what was its purpose in the first place?
dailystar.co.uk
Moral of the story: we need to blow up more mosques.
I doubt you want that considering most old mosqs are ancient Pagan temples or Christian churches that have been converted by placing minarets around them and adding Arabic calligraphy.
I mean do you honestly believe Jonah was buried under one?
Is this for rael?
who cares about some dusty old bones?
why do you like history
That what you get for naming yourselves after Sumerian goddess.
No one's talking 'bout your dick, fag
History is quite amusing. I guarantee that in 100 years at the most, WW2 and everything relating to it will be knee slap-tier.
Isis was egyptian, you utter fucking pleb.
Tripping on the offchance anyone cares, answering general mesopotamian questions. I'm that one guy who studied sumerian on here (though there's one other guy I met recently who majored in biblical studies and knows his shit).
>Nineveh
>Babylon
I want normies to leave my board
Can you recommend a freshman some reads, user?
Oh, what are you studying?
I'll give you a selection from my undergrad dissertation-
Algaze, G. 1993. The Uruk World System. Chicago.
Cooper, J. 1983b. Reconstructing History from Ancient Sources: The Lagash-Umma Border Conflict. Malibu.
Jacobsen, T. 1970. Towards the Image of Tammuz and Other Essays on Mesopotamian History and Culture. Cambridge.
Jacobsen, T. 1987. The Harps that Once-: Sumerian Poetry in Translation. London.
Leick, G. 2002. Mesopotamia: The Invention of the City. London.
Matthews, R. 1993. Cities, Seals and Writing: Archaic Seal Inscriptions from Jemdat Nasr and Ur. Berlin.
Poo, M. 2005. Enemies of Civilisation: Attitudes towards foreigners in Ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt and China. Albany.
Van De Mieroop, M. 1997. The Ancient Mesopotamian City, Oxford.
Van De Mieroop, M. 1999. Cuneiform Texts and the Writing of History. Padstow.
Weiss, H. (ed) 1986. The Origins of Cities in Dry-farming Syria and Mesopotamia in the Third Millenium B.C. Guilford.
Of that list, Leick is probably the most accessible, then Mieroop, then Algaze for the early period, then Jacobsen.
I think you can get most of those relatively easily - some of the books of inscriptions I studied were worth several thousand.
History in niggertown uni. Entering my second term this weekend, enjoying the course past the cinderblock of marxism that the professors seem to love even more so than history itself. Thanks for the reads, user, saved
No worries. What sort of narrative are they attempting to push down your throat?
We briefly studied marxist history as part of our historiography seminars, but it more the pure theory - ie. historical events are predicated more by economic/social events than by the Great Men of Carlyle - which, while interesting, is only useful when you have a synthesis of the two;- the right man at the right time.
As you're doing pure history, two more suggestions - Churchill's The History of English Speaking Peoples and Carlyle's history of the french revolution. Just stylistically, they will transform your ability at writing essays. I was taught by an old oxford academic who advised I read the former even though it was unrelated to my dissertation, and it helped immensely.
>I doubt you want that considering most old mosqs are ancient Pagan temples or Christian churches that have been converted
Pretty much all religions did/do that
DUSTY OLD BONES FULL OF GREEN DUST
I'm assuming you're either english or murican.
Briefly is not at all the case here.
There is no pure history in Brazillian higher education, private or not. It's social sciences and Historical materialism, nothing else.
The closest we get from something that could be described as 'pure history' are electives, which do tend to be p good.
>historiography seminars
best and most diverse course in the entire semester, fell in love with it
Gr8 reads again, user, you giving me quite a list here
How do sumerian sounds like?
i'd bet in proto-hebraic + lots of fonems
Sumerian isn't a Semitic language
shit, i think i got the mixed up with the akkadians then