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The Art and Architecture of Mesopotamia

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The artistic traditions of ancient Iraq, or Mesopotamia, are among the oldest in the world, for it was in this flat, fertile land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers that the world’s first advanced civilization, that of the Sumerians, arose around 3000 BC. But the long history of Mesopotamian art was marked by change as much as continuity; the region was then as now a center of political conflict, and the Sumerians gave way to a succession of powers both indigenous and foreign, each of which left a cultural imprint.

This volume’s contributing authors, all art historians and archaeologists specializing in the ancient Near East, provide accessible and lively overviews of the successive phases of this eventful artistic saga. The first two chapters cover the “classic” age of the great Mesopotamian city-states, from the pre-Sumerian Ubaid culture to Alexander’s conquest of Babylon; the remains of this era range from the fabulous treasures of the royal cemeteries at Ur to the mighty ziggurats of Uruk and Babylon. The third chapter concerns the Greco-Mesopotamian art of the Hellenistic dynasty founded by Alexander’s general Seleucus; the ruins of Seleucia, his capital on the Tigris, cover some 1500 acres. The fourth chapter investigates the artistic contributions of the two Persian dynasties, the Parthian and the Sassanid, that dominated the region from the first century BC to the seventh century AD and established the soaring iwan, or vaulted portico, as one of its typical architectural forms. The final chapter is devoted to the area’s early Islamic period, during which the Abbasid caliphs (eighth to thirteenth century AD) made Iraq the center of the Islamic world, constructing splendid mosques in their capitals of Baghdad and Samarra and elaborating the fantastic arabesques that have never disappeared from Islamic decorative art.

The ancient masterpieces discussed in these chapters are depicted in 217 stunning illustrations, most of them full-color photographs, and appended to the main text is a unique visual guide to Iraq’s principal archaeological sites, which provides a further 247 black-and-white photographs. With its authoritative, up-to-date texts and this wealth of illustrations, The Art and Architecture of Mesopotamia is an essential publication for anyone with an interest in the cultural heritage of mankind.

280 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 2007

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Giovanni Curatola

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,825 reviews57 followers
December 19, 2020
It’s sad to think of the damage done by recent wars and terrorism.
Profile Image for Mesoscope.
615 reviews358 followers
August 28, 2009
It would be hard to overstate my enthusiasm for this marvelous book, which brings the long-vanished cultures of Mesopotamia to life with an assortment of gorgeous, vivid photographs and engaging text. Clearly presented and organized, this book superbly documents sculpture, tablet literature, seals and impressions, architecture, landscape, and archaeological ruins of present-day Iraq. It's a work of breathtaking scope that imbues life into what could be a dry subject with its abundance of captivating images. It makes a delightful supplement to a study of the history and culture of the region, and it's a book I highly prize.
Profile Image for Rana.
216 reviews9 followers
June 10, 2021
The vocabulary made this completely unreadable. Save that for the academic papers, please. Some of us just want accesible information on ancient Mesopotamia... Great pictures and some good analysis for people with an IQ of 10000
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