Foreigners in the Ancient Near East (original) (raw)
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A survey of diverse aspects of the reception, attitudes toward, and activities of foreigners in the major cuneiform cultures of the third through first millennia B.C.E. While outsiders could play important roles in their new environments, they were generally soon assimilated into their host societies without effecting significant changes in them. Only toward the close of this period did the arrival of large groups of invaders convinced of the superiority of their own cultures, such as Persians and Greco-Macedonians, radically alter the age-old civilizations of Mesopotamia, Syria, and Anatolia.
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Beckman, G. (2021). Foreigners in the Ancient Near East. JAOS, 133(2), 203–216. https://doi.org/10.7817/jameroriesoci.133.2.0203