Imperialism, Trade, and Diplomacy in Ancient Egypt and the Near East
Povinně-volitelný předmět
LS 2020/2021
Garant: doc. PhDr. Jana Mynářová, Ph.D. (jana.mynarova@ff.cuni.cz)
Vyučující: Federico Zangani, Ph.D. (federico_zangani@alumni.brown.edu)
Druh atestace: zápočet (2/-) počet kreditů: 4; jazyk výuky: angličtina
This course will explore how the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Syria-Palestine, Anatolia, Mesopotamia, Persia, the
Aegean, and the wider Mediterranean were brought into contact with one another and shaped by a complex set of political, economic, and cultural interconnections. Its chronological scope ranges from the earliest forms of empire in the Near East in the 3rd millennium BC, through the interconnectedness of the Bronze and Iron Ages, until the Hellenistic kingdoms and the Roman conquest of Mesopotamia in the early 2nd century AD. The course has no prerequisites, and is intended for students with interests that may range from the ancient Near East and the Classical world to the modern Middle East, international relations, economic history, and the social sciences.
Particular emphasis will be placed on continuity and change in the geopolitical dynamics that shaped the Near
East and the Mediterranean in ancient times and that continue to characterize the whole region nowadays. This should provide the students with a solid conceptual framework which is applicable to the study of history in cross-cultural and interdisciplinary perspective.
Course objectives
Upon completion of this course, students will have learnt, amongst other things:
• the historical development of the major powers of the Near East and the Mediterranean;
• the criteria which define an empire as opposed to other territorial states;
• the political and economic interests underlying imperialism in the ancient world;
• modes of trade and long-distance exchange in the Near East and the Mediterranean;