Event
Speaker: Rocco Palermo, Assistant Professor of Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College
Abstract: Empires of the past are often considered as monolithic, solid, and ubiquitous manifestations of power. Traditional approaches to the study of these complex and multi-faceted polities have privileged the analysis of capital cities, monumental architecture, and visual propaganda. And yet, particularly in the case of polycentric empires (i.e., the Seleucid Empire), the landscape of settlements within the imperial space possessed multiple features, generating different responses to the State. The imperial evolution from the end of Assyria to the rise of the Sasanians in the 3rd c. CE in SW Asia was, for example, accompanied by a radical transformation of both urban and rural systems prompting in a radical rupture from earlier historical phases. The understanding of this organization and its long-term modification can effectively offer a new perspective on critical historical and socio-cultural phenomena. With the aid of legacy data, newly collected evidence, and excavation records, this paper aims at presenting the realpolitik of ancient empires in the steppes of North Mesopotamia through the lens of archaeology. The ultimate goal is to offer a series of counter-narrative evidence to the impact and, most importantly, lack thereof pre-modern territorial empires outside core areas and major urban centres.